Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Kristen Bell & Justine Lupe

Episode Date: September 29, 2025

Kristen Bell & Justine Lupe (Nobody Wants This) join the Armchair Expert to discuss the incredibly involved, long-game prank pulled on set, how this season of their show is a love story b...etween her their characters, and why wanting to evolve into a better person is so aligned with wanting to become a better actor. Justine, Kristen, and Dax talk about Justine coming to a place in her life where it feels good to not deliver a counterpoint, having a penchant for justice in accordance with her name, and her harrowing journey to audition for Juilliard. Justine explains feeling a part of the unit of TV which makes it so much less brutal than working in theater, wanting to know the futures of her on-screen relationships to assist in building them but being open to the mystery, and the relevance of imaginary podcast money math.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Wondry Plus subscribers can listen to Armchair Expert early and ad free right now. Join Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Or you can listen for free wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome, welcome, welcome to armchair expert. I'm Dan Shepard and I'm joined by Monica Padman. Today we have a very, very fun pairing from Nobody Wants us, Kristen Bell and Justine Loop. Justine Loop is an actor. Kristen Bell is an actor.
Starting point is 00:00:27 Justine was in succession, Mr. Mercedes, Luckyest Girl Live, and they are both on Nobody Wants This. Coming out, October 23rd on Netflix, guys, I've watched season two, and it's spectacular. If you loved it the first time, you're going to be so delighted this time. Please enjoy Kristen Bell and Justine Loop. Stick around to watch an exclusive clip from Nobody Wants This.
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Starting point is 00:01:37 He's an ultra How are you good? I was hoping you'd be wearing Something like these pants Because you were some similar pants To set And I was like, this is cool I did, I did
Starting point is 00:01:55 It's really good and nobody's doing it. Oh, my God. It's a singularly with Dax situation. There's a reason nobody's doing it? No, I don't. I actually think it's really good. It's very up my alley.
Starting point is 00:02:07 I like it. I did hear a story through the grapevine. Okay. That on Sunday Emmys. You were debating whether to wear your vans with your nice suit, which is a move you do a lot. Uh-huh. And you decided to wear the nice real shoes.
Starting point is 00:02:24 Yes. And I thought that. was really nice and a big step. Mature? You put your identity aside for the sake of the outfit. But let me ask you something, Gail, should one set their identity aside for their clothes? For their wife's moment?
Starting point is 00:02:41 Yeah. It depends. There was a lot at play because he tried on each shoe. I saw both sides. I really did because I like the fact that you make it your own. And you had phases. You were only cowboy shirts, remember? I had a lot of cowboy shirts.
Starting point is 00:02:57 You were the ones with like the pearl buttons. And then once the cowboy shirts got a little ratty, you started cutting them off. So then you were sleeveless cowboy shirts, yeah. Okay, we lost Justin. It's a button down and it has like two pockets like this, but it has the flap over yellowstone, right? Okay. I mean, we can say yellowstone or we can say Jack White's going to make a big difference to the listener. It was cool.
Starting point is 00:03:20 But what I loved about it is that it was very you and that you don't really sacrifice. And then he does Van Zalot or tennis shoes like when he goes on a talk show. And I do appreciate that. When he was wearing this suit, I will admit they both looked cute. Great. The level of the Emmys being what they were, that it wasn't just like a fancy party we were going to. Was it in a backyard picnic. And particularly the fact that Mr. Armani just passed away.
Starting point is 00:03:44 Yes. And where you? Oh, you were wearing Armani. Only because my bride was wearing Armani. Totally, totally. And then I got sucked in the cast in that. Thank God. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:03:53 He got brought in and a beautiful tailored tucks. Yes, yes. So out of respect for the person that designed the suit, I thought it was kind of cool. I just feel like that was a big thing. This is a person who it could get testy if you were like, could you please wear the nice shoes? So I had both options. I walked into her room and all the ladies were there.
Starting point is 00:04:14 And I said, what's the vote? I was very open to whichever way it went. And it was leaning towards vans for a while. I have a good conscience. I wasn't trying to sway the jury at all. You were not. It was a close call. But I just appreciate the flexibility.
Starting point is 00:04:28 I want to give credit where credits do. You know what you'll appreciate more than anything. When the call was made among the girls, he goes, okay. The fun part is Nicole the stylist, who knows the most in the room about what should be worn or not. There's just all this debate and chatter, and she's just sitting there dead quiet. And I'm like, you're biting your tongue so well. You must have a really strong opinion. And she's like, no, come into the light.
Starting point is 00:04:49 And she looked at it and she's like, the black ones make you look longer. I want you to be longer. That's not even a selling point for me. I've already been too long. You're like, I'm already so tall. Were you too long as a kid? What age were you this height? I think in high school.
Starting point is 00:05:01 I'm tall are you. I'm 5'9. Yeah, that's a hefty height. It has been in moments too long. Like when I dated a guy who was 5, 4, 5, 5.5. Short king. He was pulling it off. He was a short king, but I did feel that I didn't want to walk together.
Starting point is 00:05:17 I understand. Yeah. I felt so big. Did you lean on? over when you hugged or did he go tiptoes? I'm not saying that to insult the short king because I have to obviously lean over quite a great deal to hug Kristen and I just wonder, were you in that situation? Do you have scoliosis?
Starting point is 00:05:33 I'm sure. I'm sure I did. I don't remember. It's kind of like a blackout moment of my dating history. But I do know that he was just so confident. I mean, that's part of why we dated is he just had it going on. But it was less about him and more about me just feeling like a monster so tall. Like if someone saw a photo and they just naturally assumed he was five nine, they go, shit, that gal then is 6-3. She's like 7. Wait, can I ask you though? When you said, yeah, I'll wear these shoes, did you feel great afterwards? Didn't it feel good to be like, to cooperate?
Starting point is 00:06:03 Yeah. It should feel great. I recognize that as a virtue. Right. But I do think my annoying identity is that I do what's right or wrong, period. Totally. Well, hence why this was a big step forward for mankind. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:22 I'm stubborn too, and I had a moment the other day where an ex asked me to coffee. And I was like, great, I would love to catch up with that person. But I was like, I should touch base and see how he feels about it. And he's like, you know, it's recent enough that I feel like maybe is it okay if we don't do that? I wanted to be like, but, and instead I was like, it's not worth putting him in a weird moment of not feeling good. I care so much more about my husband than I care about hanging out with this person for 20 minutes or or whatever, an hour or two. And I got to say, it felt good to be like,
Starting point is 00:06:53 I honor your wishes. Yeah. Yeah, that would not describe you as stubborn. That's so interesting. You think you're stubborn? I don't think in the interactions it feels like stubbornness, but I do feel like I'm like, well, but here's the reason why. Yeah, because you want to go, you can trust me, you have nothing to worry about.
Starting point is 00:07:07 I have no desire to. Yes, like I could have gone through that whole thing. Like, there's none of that there. It isn't stubborn necessarily, but it is stating a case past the presentation of the options. And I was like, we don't even need to do that. And it felt good. Yeah. Do you have a justice hang up?
Starting point is 00:07:25 I do. My name means justice. Yes. Justine means justice. Yeah. And it's so in me. If someone is mean to someone, if one of my friends get fouled, I irrationally want to step in there and be like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. We want a sheriff a little bit.
Starting point is 00:07:42 Yeah, kind of. Yeah. Are you ADHD? Because I just learned from Tim Simons that a huge comorbidity of ADHD. is inflated sense of justice. Oh, interesting. It's funny you say that because just recently
Starting point is 00:07:54 our couple's therapist was like, I think you might have ADHD. I've never thought it myself, but I'd say the thing that Tyson gets frustrated with the most is that I leave things everywhere. He'll be in the bathroom and there's a spatula on the bathroom counter
Starting point is 00:08:09 or he'll lift up a piece of paper and there's a used cue tip under the piece of paper. He is a Virgo. You're Virgo, right? Yeah, double. Okay. So he's really neat. Are you like that?
Starting point is 00:08:21 I'm not that neat. That's one thing that saluted me. I've been to your... Well, I clean up your guests. She doesn't think it's neat because she's a Virgo. No, I'm quite messy, but I am all about presentation.
Starting point is 00:08:35 If people are coming over, it's going to look perfect, but my day-to-day, like right now, it's a mess. Uh-huh. See me too. I'm messy. What's your sign?
Starting point is 00:08:44 I'm a Gemini. Uh-oh. Why did you look at him? Does he have a bad history with Jimini? No, he just hates to astrology. Oh, no, I don't hate it. I don't believe in it. It's good to have people like you around.
Starting point is 00:08:53 Yeah, I don't believe in God. I don't hate God. Uh-huh. You know, I don't hate the Easter bunny. Yeah, but it's just not real. Yeah. Can I drop back to one issue with the vans thing? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:04 I don't even think it would have even been a debate. If not for a previous guest, Bobby Brown, who's a queen? Uh-huh. The makeup type. Yeah, yeah, yeah. She said, oh, yeah, I remembered meeting you at the time 100 because you had a vans on with your tucks and i was like this guy's great man he's got his own style ball so i was kind of riding high dax you're so cute i'm sorry i just think it's adorable it's like when you meet you
Starting point is 00:09:29 you would never think that you are so cute and sweet about holding on to these little things and being like she said i look good in the van so i wanted it's really endearing i was like oh and i guess this is kind of working because she would know do you know what your moon sign i'm just kidding i want to know what your emotional little sweetheart shadow side is it's good to have people like you around. My husband's like, I see you, and I lasso you and pull you back down to planet Earth with this stuff. He's really good about being like, okay, cool. Now moving
Starting point is 00:09:56 on, we're not going to talk about the moon being in Scorpio and how it's making you sad today. Will you make life decisions based? No, I don't do that. Because that's where I think someone would need to step in. Like, no, we should buy this house. Totally. And I do have friends who do it. They're like, I need to move to blah, blah, blah.
Starting point is 00:10:12 Because I talked to a psychic and they looked at my birth chart and it's time to go. And it's a vortex. Totally. There's no jobs, but it is a vortex. The vortex thing I got to say I do believe in. Well, I got to tell you. Yeah, that's the place I was going to say.
Starting point is 00:10:27 I got to say we were there and I was like, I kind of believe in in this vortex. There's twisted trees. It felt funny there. It did. It's wild. I did a program called Sedona Soul Adventures where I went. I was in a crazy relationship. The guy was like, you need to go check out this place to work on your confidence.
Starting point is 00:10:45 So I went to this place called Sedona Soul Adventures. So I went to this place called Sedona Soul Adventures and basically what it is is them just rotating you through healer's houses. Oh, okay. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:10:54 Yeah, so you do like, Reiki, you do like chakra measuring. And they're like, you're actually dead inside. I'm like, yeah, you, no, you get a hotel. Oh, okay. And then there was this guy named Rick
Starting point is 00:11:04 and he was in charge of like putting together a folder and being like, you'll go to all these healers houses and do this like soul healing journey. And I got to know Sedona through this thing because it's like five days
Starting point is 00:11:15 of going from house to house. You're going into these people's houses and doing like healing. And everyone's home as a smell. Yeah. Totally. It's a vibe. That's the part that would be tricky for me. Totally. Yeah. No, I think a lot of it might be tricky for you. Especially if you don't buy into this stuff. But did you leave feeling better and more confident. I did. And did you feel like it was nurturing for him to say you should work on your confidence? Or did it feel insulting? No. I mean, no, you know what's funny is he had gone there before with a prior girlfriend and they all knew him and they were all like, and when I got back from the retreat, the end of the story is that I left that relationship.
Starting point is 00:11:52 Yeah. He sewed his own scenes. Yeah, that I, my light got turned back on and I was like, and I'm out. So you did get confidence. I did. It worked. I felt different. Because I got to say, as a thing to suggest to a partner, they might work on, confidence feels like maybe a good one because it would be for you. Totally. That seems like. like within the zone of what you could get away with suggesting. Totally. Yeah. It's not like stop being so annoying. Yeah. Or go to this place and stop being messy. Yes. And I think he had a lot going on. He was a very evolved person in certain ways. And he really had done a lot of work on himself. So there was that. But I just don't think he was good in relationship. Well, he was so
Starting point is 00:12:32 short. At that moment. No, this is not the short king. I don't know who it is. But it could definitely be the short. He wasn't the short king back. You've had a lot of lovers. I dated a lot. I dated a lot in I did. I didn't have a lot of long-term relationships. I did like six months, three months, all through my 20s back to back. Great. Kristen is a little regretful. She was very active. Always with someone. She was very sexually active. And she wishes she was even more sexually active. I just wish I butterfly around a little bit more. On a scale of 1 to 10, how sexually active were you in your 20s, I guess? How do you say that? Ten is having sex and zero is not?
Starting point is 00:13:16 Zero is virgin. Ten is sex worker. Four? Okay. And I just wish I maybe would have gone. Six? Yeah. I think I was a six. Nice. Yeah, really good stuff. Ladies. Yeah. Okay. You guys. I'm proud of you. High five. You guys get along so well. You have such a cute relationship. Right out of the gates when you started working together, you started coming around the house.
Starting point is 00:13:39 And then quickly you were pregnant. And so there was a secret. And I said, I'll protect you. You're just me. Yeah. And then the baby arrived in your run. So I just want to set a little bit of framework for how well I knew you when this wonderful event happened that you orchestrated. So I had met you several times at the house. I thought you were absolutely lovely and an effortless person to have around.
Starting point is 00:14:01 You're very chill and relaxed and you're not needy. You're a lovely guest. And I diagnosed you as normal. So far as like an actor can be normal. I thought, yeah, she's very normal. So season two commences, and I guess maybe from your perspective, Hun, what was the first thing that happened? Oh, I remember exactly what it was. We were shooting the scene in the second episode where we're getting out of the car with Adam in a parking garage.
Starting point is 00:14:30 They're saying, okay, guys, go to one. We're about to roll. Justine and Adam are already in the car chatting. I get in the car and I hear her say, it's really nutritional. And then a ping goes off in Christensen's head. Anything nutritious is going to spark your interest. Yes. And as we identified, this entire experience was predicated on my nosiness.
Starting point is 00:14:53 So I went what? And Justine goes, do you ever do this? The first urine of the day you drink again? Action. And then I'm like, what did she just say? Wait, what? The first urine of the day, the first pee of the day, you drink. She said, do you hear about this people doing this?
Starting point is 00:15:10 You drink the urine? You're in of the day. People do do this. Yeah. To reinstall your minerals. Depleted minerals. And they called action right after that sentence. And we get out of the car and we do this scene.
Starting point is 00:15:22 And then we reset and I go, wait, wait, what? And she goes, well, I mean, I just started it. But I think that it's really been helping me. Do you do it? And I was like, no, I don't think that's right. Actually, at this point, I got to say you were much more polite. You were like, really? Really?
Starting point is 00:15:45 Really. And I was like, yeah, really. And then they were like, action again. All right. So that ended. And then how long between the next? Installment? Yes.
Starting point is 00:15:55 The next art installation? The next installment was that I brought P to work. Okay. And. In a mason jar? Yes. I put it in a mason jar. And then I moved it into a canteen because we thought too obvious.
Starting point is 00:16:10 We can't have it in a canteen. We have to put it into a mason jar. So we put it into a canteen. We're sitting behind the scenes waiting to go. I call base camp and I get on the phone with our base camp. And she says, now mind you, we're in a green room. There are numerous people there. And again, Justine knows I listen to everything.
Starting point is 00:16:28 Yes. It's not like she's engaged you and then says, I have to make this call. She just initiates this call. She's in the corner kind of like this. Hey, Rustin, hey, can you do me a favor? Can you go into my trailer in my fridge? there's the liquids container. Can you send it up?
Starting point is 00:16:43 Okay, thank you. Oh, and I don't know what the HR is about this, but I feel like I should tell you it is urine. Like if you're okay handling that. No. Okay, okay, okay, okay. Then she just goes back to doing whatever. What a pro.
Starting point is 00:16:58 You were able to just not even look at her to see if she got you. What confidence. The confidence thing works. You kind of have to. I'm on my phone like this. And I think I get. brought in. So she comes home from work and she's like, yeah, Justine is drinking her pee. She was telling me depleted minerals and it's really good. And then she had transpo bringing up some container
Starting point is 00:17:22 of her pee. And now I'm like, okay, that gal that was at the house also drinks her pee. So in that moment when she heard this phone call, she did engage at this point. And she's like, what are you talking about? At this point, I had pre-prepared an AI generated article about he being good for you. Screenshotted it and she asks me about it and I'm like ready to go. I said Justini, where are you getting this info? Like if you visited some witch and she said, do this, we need to discuss it. But like have you researched this? I feel like we should look into this before you actually do it. Could be bacteria in there. It's waste. Honey, it's waste. And she goes, no, look. You can read it. Okay. Great. And how good was the article? I can't really remember because all I wanted to do
Starting point is 00:18:10 was my own research. Yeah, right. So I, the second Justine left to go get her water bottle, called Dr. Mike. Oh, you did. You called Dr. Mike directly. Yeah. You reach out to him whenever you have a curious. He's my internet.
Starting point is 00:18:25 He's a personal doctor. Yes. I said, I have a friend who is drinking her own urine. What are the risks slash benefits of this? Have you heard anything about it? And he was like, well, honestly, I think it sounds. insane, but I don't think it would hurt her. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 00:18:45 Because people who are stranded drink their pee, you can do it. He said, there are a lot better ways to remineralize, like, a multivitamin. And I think that was my next argument to Justine. I said, have you ever thought about taking a multivitamin in the morning? And then I think I came back with like, oh, yeah, I'm taking all the multivitamins that then lead to the most effective P. Oh, sure. Concentrated.
Starting point is 00:19:13 Actually, there's some logic here I'm following. It is like a weird Ayurvedic. Like, I did some research too. It is something that people do. But at this point, I knew Kristen's fucking telling Dax. She's going to tell maybe a few friends. I have to be okay knowing that this is going to be something that is said about me behind my back. The reputational cost.
Starting point is 00:19:34 But let me be clear, not in a way of talking shit. No, but just like the fact. of Justine is drinking her own piss. You were so open about it. Well, it's a testament to how likable you are because I was never like, she's out. I was saying, coming home and saying it to you because I was worried about her.
Starting point is 00:19:50 I care a lot about this girl and I was like, honey, I think I don't, she's, she's drinking her pee and she's talking a lot about it at work. And I drank it in front of you once. This was one of the most epic performances I've ever seen. So about five days later, we're sitting at the table on set, where we record the podcast.
Starting point is 00:20:10 Again, I'm not engaging with her, but she knows that I'm looking. And she grabs her water bottle, and she kind of makes eye contact with me, and she goes, do you want to smell it? And I go, no, stop. And we're getting our touch-ups, and she goes like this.
Starting point is 00:20:25 Teresa. Trace, do you have a mint? Oh. My God. So for the listener, Kristen's drinking it, and then taking a big pole. And then placing the mint in her mouth.
Starting point is 00:20:38 It was just dipping it in. It was such a performance. And the whole time I'm getting touch-ups. They're doing powder on me and I'm like, oh, my gosh. Could you smell it? A little bit. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:52 Which I was grateful she had the mint. So my curiosity, if I were in your shoes, would be like, I a little bit understand she's drinking it in the morning. But now she drinks it all day. She's just doing it all the time now. That's a mean source of hydration as her own urine. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:05 If I had thought this through a little bit more, it doesn't quite. I think that was pretty early in the day. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Obviously. Obviously. I was very worried. Well, right, because it's not even just about the urine. She's on a path.
Starting point is 00:21:18 We started with urine and now the sky's the limit. Totally. Fecal transplants are next and God knows what kind of. And I do have a little bit of crunch in me. I'm a little. Sure. It's believable that I'm leaning into this. Well, I think we both do, which is why she had to actually set up some guardrails
Starting point is 00:21:37 around this. Oh, yeah, I talked to everyone. I talked to Anna. I was like, Kristen, do not let her drink her own piss. Great, because that may be the most shocking thing of this whole prank is that Kristen didn't get her in on it. 100%. Because she is down to try anything that might help.
Starting point is 00:21:54 That was the whole origin of this whole thing, is that she's obsessed with biohacking. And so I was like, what would be the thing? And we talked about it. Adam and Tim were in on this with me. I was like, what could we do? that wouldn't be so believable that she would try it. It was a fine line.
Starting point is 00:22:12 You had to thread the needle. Yeah, we did. You did it perfectly. You got your flowers earlier and now you, Kristen, get yours. I am so happy and impressed. You've come a long way that I didn't try it. You did not try this because I am truly shocked that you did. I was born with a very why not attitude.
Starting point is 00:22:30 If it doesn't feel too dangerous, but again, I had already gotten confirmation. Dr. Mike had said it's not going to hurt her. I know that's why this is. There wasn't danger. It culminates with on set, Justine rolls up, and she's not actually shooting that day, but I didn't consider that at the time. She rolls up with a cooler. And it's about, I don't know, 18 inches by 15 inches.
Starting point is 00:22:56 And she says, I have a present for you. And I looked at the cooler and I said, I hope it's a puppy. And she set it down on the table outside and she opened it up and I see three different sized, mason jars with gradiating color. Some are brown, some are yellow, some are... Ew! And I open it up and I look up at Justine's face and she's going,
Starting point is 00:23:20 like a pleading for the listener, like a really excited look. I was very calculated at this point because I was like, do not hurt this girl's feelings. You love her so much. How do you get her away from this idea without poo-pooing it? I looked up, I said, is this your urine? And she said, yes, I saved three of the best batches for you. Stop it.
Starting point is 00:23:46 They're super, super high quality mineralized. And she starts touching me. She's like, this one isn't she's, they're leaking. The thing smells disgusting. She's showing me the mason jars. Oh, it's unreal. I took a beat, and we have this on video. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:02 Because people were recording it. They knew it was happening now. And I said, Justine, no, no. I don't want this. I don't want this. You said that? And it was really hard for me. I know.
Starting point is 00:24:13 I'm impressed. It's very sweet, but it's like. Cannot drink your pee. Perfect. It's perfect. It felt kind and just honest. Oh, Kristen, good job. I do not want your pee.
Starting point is 00:24:23 And then she goes, I would much rather have a puppy. And then she said, April Fool's. And it was April 1. No. This whole thing was leading up to April Fool's Day. Well, it was four or five weeks worth of material. Material, yeah. It was a long run.
Starting point is 00:24:40 This is the most incredible prank ever. I'm so impressed, guys. It was really satisfying. I have never felt more loved in my entire life than when it occurred to me how long she had been working on this and how many props and how much performance and how many people had been wrangled into this. And I just felt very loved. Well, the best is that you were staging conversations away from her that you just knew she would stumble into.
Starting point is 00:25:12 Totally. She's like a little mouse bat. It's like ears that hear everything. So I was like, if I'm just a little bit out of reach, that's the best place to be. Yes. That was brilliant. It was not my own pee. I steeped chamomile tea at different gradients.
Starting point is 00:25:30 Which smells gross, by the way. Camomile tea smells gross. It does smell gross. and the grand finale of this actually is that I accidentally left it in our car for like months and months and months and just recently it fell out of my car and smashed all over the ground
Starting point is 00:25:45 and my husband had to pick it up because I was carrying the baby and he was like, what is that smell? Like, what the fuck? Yeah, that blows a cue tip under a piece of paper on the water. I'm terrible. I'm a trash bag. I know. No, but you win some you lose him.
Starting point is 00:26:01 You get this committed wife. He did love the game. He loved the prank. He was there for it all. Wow. He felt so warm inside and so loved. Well, the pee itself is warm enough. How did you get this idea?
Starting point is 00:26:16 I think it was just the relentless bio. I mean, this woman loves talking about sauna, cold punch, peptides, plugging up your body with greens and metamusal and apple cider vinegar before you eat pasta. Like, she's just the tracker, the bun, the bun. Well, I have Bucos issues. I have to track it, Justine. It's just, she's like just on it. And I know she loves pranks because she's played me
Starting point is 00:26:42 a few of Jimmy Kimmel's pranks. So I knew that there was ugly around pranks. Wasn't there something about his house in Christmas? Yeah, yeah. When he pranked Mickey and he was behind the emails, remember Mickey had bought a house, his cousin Mickey, and the people they bought it from were like, asked if they could come back for Christmas.
Starting point is 00:27:00 And if Mickey says yes to everything. and she said, sure, okay. But Jimmy had hacked the email, and he was responding with the fact that we'll need some ingredients for our Christmas dinner. We're going to make this soup. It kept on building and building,
Starting point is 00:27:12 and she was just so sweet and you could just feel overwhelmed. We'll be there at midnight. It was a great one. The slow burn prank, it's the first time I've ever done it. And there's, I can't tell you how satisfying. It's intoxicating.
Starting point is 00:27:26 It's slowly building a life. Yeah, so subtle. Talk about throwing it away. like a little thing here and then get that from my trailer there. Totally. The best was when we engage in a conversation and then they'd be like action and I'm like, ha, ha. Like I just like left her with like just a mess inside during this scene. And then like took it away. It was fun.
Starting point is 00:27:48 It was really fun. Is Kristen your favorite co-star of all time? She loves you so much. She talks about you endlessly. Dreamy, dreamy, dreamy, dreamy. It's awesome. I have talked about it too much, but having her be the first person. that I said that I was pregnant to in her living room with a sheet mask on her face and the way that she just bounced up and ran around the room and then gave me honestly an Emmy winning speech about the magic of being a mom and how important it's been to her. It was so, so sweet. And honestly, on top of that, she's just the biggest role model to watch on set because she's kind to everyone. She's professional. She's playful. You're an incredible mom. I love your guys's relationship. I've been really loving.
Starting point is 00:28:32 because Snoke was like this too on Succession, just the right person to be there at the right time. I do see it as sorry, Dax, divine intervention a little bit that I got these women at these times in my life. Snoke was prego through the last season of the show. I watched her do the whole thing incredibly pregnant. Yeah. And that show was shooting for like nine months. Her whole pregnancy was literally that whole season. And so having that, to know that kind of work is possible while pregnant and just to get inspired by that. Yeah, that you're going to have your whole life and this thing. Totally.
Starting point is 00:29:07 Like, she just killed it. She slayed. So, like, all the kind of preconceived things about what it's like to be pregnant and what it's like to be a mom in this industry. And then coming in and seeing Kristen doing what she's doing during this moment, I just feel like they're little gifts. Where are you from? I'm from Colorado.
Starting point is 00:29:23 Oh. You were born in New York, but you grew up in Colorado? Yeah. Why were you born in New York? So my dad was a visual artist in New York and my mom worked at a halfway house for boys. Oh, wow. Yeah. That's intense, no?
Starting point is 00:29:37 My mom's whole career has been the most intense. She worked a halfway house for boys. She then worked with children who had been abused as a therapist. She then now is working mostly with women with orderline personality disorder. Okay. She's kind of a champ in terms of committing herself to this kind of. She's in the deep end. She likes to get where it's hardest.
Starting point is 00:30:00 Yeah, she can hold space for a lot of dark. Yeah. She's dark. She's dark. Okay, good for her. Yeah, totally. Dark means dark. Yeah, I think that there is something to being someone who's lived in that level of dark that can hold space for it.
Starting point is 00:30:15 It makes me want to cry. The times where I've been in the most distress, like when I was 21, I did ecstasy. I had the worst trip of my life. I thought I was going to die. My friend thought she was going to die. We were like, it was lace with something. I was going to say, I bet it had bath salts in it. Yeah, there was some weird shit in it.
Starting point is 00:30:31 Yeah. And my mom, I called her at 4 o'clock in the morning, and I was like, shit's help. Hit in the fan. I smoked my brain. She came to the house. She opens the door. I'm naked. All of us are naked.
Starting point is 00:30:45 There's three of us. We're all naked. Oh, my God. Before the shit hit the fan, it'd have been very fun. Sure, sure, sure. There's, like, candles and bean bags and, like, there's probably wax on my body. some way. And she comes to the door. She has a carrier of coffee. She has a bunch of children's books. She sat there. Like, it makes me cry. She sat there for like hours and just talked us
Starting point is 00:31:10 through it. She was A plus mom. And read children's books. She sat there. She just calmed us down, read to us, took us on a drive, played calm music for hours and hours. Two days nursed us back to hell. It was terrible. It was the first time where I was like, oh, I, understand what depression is. I was so low and she just sat there through the whole thing and tended to us. And meanwhile, my dad was on another planet. We were truly traumatized. Laying in bed, he comes in with like clowns mashed at one time and he's like, hey guys. Not reading the room at all. But my mom was like, that's just her in a nutshell. She's not always that way. But when crisis is there, when shit hits the fan, she rises into a part of herself
Starting point is 00:31:56 That's a hero, honestly. Did she have a wild childhood herself? Yeah. Yeah. Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare. We are supported by Cozy. Let me tell you about the time I tried to move my old sectional up three flights of stairs, two broken picture frames, one scuffed wall, and several questionable words later.
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Starting point is 00:33:31 So what year did you move to Colorado? So when I was a baby, basically my dad was in the art scene, and he was basically like, if I have a kid, I'm so in this art world right now. There's no way that I can do both. If we're going to do this, we've got to get out of here. They moved to Colorado, and he became a closet case artist, only did art for my mom, basically shut down his career to be a dad. And he worked at the Denver Art Museum, so he didn't shut down his career, but he stopped
Starting point is 00:34:01 making art and being an artist and doing freelance work and got a steady job. He actually never showed any of his art until when I was pregnant. He had his first art show. Oh, really? Yeah. Oh, that's adorable. And then you went to an arts high school, performing arts high school. Why does grandma have a theater?
Starting point is 00:34:17 there. So my grandma was a super activist. She was on every board for women's rights. She enforced this busing system that brought kids from different areas into other areas. She held Colorado accountable for doing that. She started this arts program. It started as a very small thing and then evolved into the Denver School of the Arts. So I went to the school that she kind of.
Starting point is 00:34:44 Yeah. Yeah. No wonder your name means justice. This is all adding up. Yeah, yeah, yeah. How does one set their sights on Juilliard and then what's the process to get into Juilliard? Because I can't imagine ever thinking that's even an option for me. I mean, it wouldn't be.
Starting point is 00:34:59 I don't know if I'm talented enough. Still, that seems like the single most exclusive place to get into. Totally. I mean, it felt like a shot in the dark when it was happening. There wasn't an expectation of getting in at all. But the first time I saw it, I was watching a PBS documentary with them. at home and I was like, whoa, that school looks cool. I think I was 13 or something.
Starting point is 00:35:21 Yeah. And then a kid from my school, Gabe Ebert, two years older than me, he got in. Okay. And that was like, oh, okay, maybe. And you acted with Gabe? Yeah. You know, like, I'm better than Gabe. No, Gabe was like the shining golden boy of our school.
Starting point is 00:35:36 And I was not, actually. Why not? I don't know. You know, I didn't get a lot of parts. And I later found out, and this is so embarrassing. It was embarrassing when I found out in my 30s. my parents had to go into the school and have a talk with my drama teacher
Starting point is 00:35:49 and be like, you need to cast her in more thing. Which is like a crazy fucking thing to do and so in there, it's humiliating. But they didn't. Did it work? Yeah. I got into a few shows. It's so crazy.
Starting point is 00:36:03 And I remember my drama teacher saying something about parents coming in and complaining about their kids not being in stuff and thinking like that was crazy. Yeah. And then I later found out to do that. And then later I found out it was my parents.
Starting point is 00:36:15 I bet it's Becca's parents. Yeah, totally. They're so involved. I was, like, kind of shocked because they were very supportive parents, but they are not Karen parents or whatever. They're not like, like a no-y. Yeah. No siblings? I have a brother.
Starting point is 00:36:29 You're a brother. Older or younger? Younger. Did he go to the school as well? He went there for middle school and then he was like, screw this. I want to play sports. And he left and he went to East High, which is the quintessential classic high school. But still ended up super artistic.
Starting point is 00:36:43 Yeah. Then he ended up going to. school for film at Chapman. He's a photographer and a director and very, very cool stuff. Yeah. Okay, so what's the process of getting into Juilliard? So it's nuts. Basically, you have to go to a unified audition.
Starting point is 00:36:59 You go to one of three places and you do an audition, which is two monologues. And then there's a second set of monologues that they call you back for later in the day. So you have four monologues prepared. You do that. Then you have to sing to them. Oh, boy. Can you sing? No.
Starting point is 00:37:13 And it was a nightmare. And I sang fever, which is kind of. an inappropriate song for like a 17-year-old. Oh, wow. And I was like, really, I'm going to seduce them. And I remember I walked up to their desk and they were like, can you please back up in the middle of the song? You got too sexual with it? Yeah, I got a little too sexual.
Starting point is 00:37:30 They were like, end scene. We're done. After that, you have to do an interview. So that's one day of three different stages. Is that in New York or is that that's a lot? Okay. Then they have another round, the final 40. They bring 40 kids back to do two days of auditions in the school.
Starting point is 00:37:51 You have to do your monologue with the faculty, and then you have to do mock classes, and all the faculty sits on the side of the classrooms and take notes and watch how you perform. The crazy story about that was the weekend of this callback. There was like a massive blizzard, and I was set to go on this plane by myself. We get to the airport. my dad is like, there's a huge blizzard. I'm going to come with you. I was like, dad, leave me alone.
Starting point is 00:38:17 I'm 17. I can do this. My plane gets canceled. I call him back. I'm like, this is. Actually, what do I do? Bring your mask. My dad is like, okay, we're going to figure this out.
Starting point is 00:38:27 He comes to the airport. He gets into the airport, buys a ticket. We end up getting on a flight from Denver to Chicago that then is going to take a flight from Chicago to D.C. And then from D.C. take a train to. Oh, my goodness. New York.
Starting point is 00:38:43 It's massive. It's a massive storm. I'm freaking out. I call the school. They're like, listen, if you can get here for 10 minutes or two days, whatever, just the important thing is you just get here. So we get to the Chicago branch of this whole thing. And they're like, everything's canceled.
Starting point is 00:38:59 There's no flight to D.C. anymore. And all my stuff's checked in a bag. So that's all on its way or whatever. He's like, okay, we're going to rent a car. And we're going to drive from Chicago to New York through. a blizzard, through the night, 16 hours or whatever it is. And he did it. Oh, my, what a champ. Got a car and he drove me through this blizzard and we're watching semis literally on the side of the road, like toppled over. It's crazy torrential. I can't describe it. I couldn't take over at any point because
Starting point is 00:39:29 it was so hard to drive. He stopped for five minutes at a McDonald's to do like a micro nap, literally five minutes. And he drove me all the way there and I made it. What was your mental state on this whole journey. You had to already be nervous to go. And now you're like, I'm doomed. Were you letting any of that come in? Totally. I was totally heartbroken. Once he got there, honestly, I was like, if my dad's here, like, maybe we can do it. Yeah, yeah. And then the nerves burned off. And by the time I got there, I think we were both so tired. I was wearing some other student of the school's clothes because I didn't have any clothes. And I was just so worn down that I actually think it really helped because I just didn't have any. nerve to give. It was like gone. And he slept on a friend's couch and stayed there with me until the moment that he was like, can I go? Am I good? And he left and then he let me do the plane ride back, like the adult that I wanted to be. Oh, wow. So how many people get in? 16. 16 is the
Starting point is 00:40:29 number of students. Yeah. When did you start feeling like, I think I might get in. When the 40 thing happened, I was like, okay, there's a shot. That's 50%ish. Yeah. Maybe I could do it. But then you're, like, looking around and everybody's so good that you're like, I don't know. I don't know. I also was 17 at that time, so I don't quite remember all the steps. But I remember being so shocked when I got the phone call that I got in. And is it insanely rigorous? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:55 You know, Kristen was down the street learning to act. And she was, like, in her sweatpants breathing in a dude's mouths and stuff. 100%. It's called Alexander Technique. He makes fun of it all the time. Breathing in men's mouths and stuff. It was crazy. It's just such a singular thing.
Starting point is 00:41:10 thing to like put that much time into that, like only that for four years from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. every day because you're doing school and then you're doing rehearsal for whatever the play is. And I'm like, I'll never do anything like that again. Yeah. And the teachers are tough. They try to strip you down a little bit, right? Isn't that sort of the goal? Yeah, I think that the goal is to basically take away as many habits. Right. As they can so that you are free to decide what you want to do. Blank slate. Yeah. And I think that that can be great and it also can take away the thing that got people into the school. Yes. Yeah. Where it's like actually that person was incredibly shiny and they had an essence that was their fingerprint and then get beat them down into not trusting the thing that got them there.
Starting point is 00:42:00 That's my little bit of a pushback on this approach. You take someone who's had 18 years of practicing how to be an appealing human being. They learn a bag of tricks. that work for them. And I see actors then try to get rid of all of that and take on some entirely different persona. And it's like, it can be accomplished, but I don't know that it's the net win of it all. If you have some shiny, sparkly things that you do.
Starting point is 00:42:25 Yeah, you want to hold on to the sparkle. Ultimately, someone would say the goal is to learn how to do both, right? You could be in a rom-com, but if you're playing Truman Capote, you don't need any parts of yourself to do that. Yeah, or that you should be able to release the things that are habitual in order to put something else in there. I had a little bit of fuck you and me.
Starting point is 00:42:44 Just enough. Yeah. I was totally a people pleaser and I totally wanted them to like me and I wanted to do a good job, but I also had just enough. I don't know about this. Yeah. I don't want to come out of here as an acting android.
Starting point is 00:42:56 Yeah. I don't want to be a bot. I don't really. That's a little bit. That was rude. That was rude. Sorry, we should talk about the robot that way. Crazy.
Starting point is 00:43:05 She is a little bit of an acting robot. She can do anything. There's not a moment where you're like, don't buy. Exactly. True that. And also then she's like, okay, we've got it. We're moving on. And you're like, girl, we had a talk at one point during this season where she was like, she loves the speed. Because she can fucking nail it. Yeah. And I'm like, but bu, babe, baby. Baby, baby. Like, maybe just a few. I mean, I'm not that machine yet. Yeah. And I don't think that I'm sucking, but I don't feel like I'm in the place where I'm like, okay, we can get in. But I think you're not giving yourself enough credit because you're a very, believable actor as well. And I think sometimes what stands in the way of people is like, wait, can we
Starting point is 00:43:45 have one more? I didn't feel it. I want to remind you, it doesn't matter if you feel it. Is the audience going to feel it? And that information we get from the people behind the monitor. So if they're like this, then it's like, let's go to lunch. No, no. I think the feeling it thing probably maybe 60%
Starting point is 00:44:01 of the time or less. I remember there was a point where I was with Brendan Gleason. Do you guys know who Brendan Gleason is? He was in Bruges with Colin Farrell. He's like, oh, gee. incredible. Paddington, too, you might be familiar. He and I were doing a show together, and I was like, fuck, I did not feel that at all. And he was like, well, that is why you're an actor and you have skill.
Starting point is 00:44:19 You can rely on having skill most of the time. You're not going to be like transcending. That's why I think speaking about it in terms of were you paying attention in the scene is more valuable than did you feel it. Were you paying attention? Yeah. Were you taking the other person in?
Starting point is 00:44:35 Were you present? Yeah. But some of that time, the answer is no. Some of the time I'm like, girl, I was like not there. Yeah. Yeah. So yeah. You also just had a baby.
Starting point is 00:44:48 Totally. And more than having a baby, I was weaning. I don't know. We actually haven't talked about it too much. But no one told me that when you wean, it's psychotic drops of all the hormones that were in you to keep your boobs flush and milk out. They're gone. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:04 And so I was like waking up with anxiety in a way that I never had before. I didn't have crazy postpart. but I had wild weaning style. And I was like, what is going on? Am I just nervous about acting again? It was the first time that I was back from having the baby. I was like, is this about the work? Is this about the show?
Starting point is 00:45:24 I had a couple friends be like, oh, it's probably bad. And I started researching and I was like, oh, that's like a major thing. Yeah. It was nuts. So from a scene partner perspective, I have never seen you be off your game. As evidenced by, Justine has this.
Starting point is 00:45:39 incredible running bit in season two, where any time that I brush up against her, she goes, Ow! Like where everything, there's one moment where I grab a wine bottle out of your hand and you scream. There's another moment where we're fighting over a remote
Starting point is 00:45:58 and you're like, you broke my finger. I know. I was like, I think I've worn this one. But I loved it, but it was any time I brushed up against her, you were, whether you want to admit it or not or whether you felt it or not, you were ready to give that piece of the sisters
Starting point is 00:46:13 where, like, if Joanne touches Morgan, Morgan will overreact. And I loved it. I mean, I don't want to, like, keep on praising Kristen, but I do think that you can feel her listening and she does draw you into, like, being there. And she's so fun to play with. As a friend, as a partner, she's a playful person.
Starting point is 00:46:31 And so we had a lot of fun. Kristen, before you started shooting this season, you said the first season was, a love story between you and Adam and the second season is a love story between you and Justine. I firmly believe that, which is so exciting. I'm so excited to watch it. I don't even think that when our writers, or specifically Aaron, who dictates a lot of where the story goes, because it's kind of her story, did you feel like as it unfolded? This is so clear to me that this is a love story between these two girls. And it's about the sisterhood because Justine has some major stuff
Starting point is 00:47:04 happening this season? I don't know. I don't know if I felt that. I did feel that I had more to do, but I do feel like last season, I felt that already. I felt my whole point of view was I'm losing the love of my life. When you're so close, you're so codependent, you're so involved in each other's lives, when someone that you love not in a romantic way, I've had it with my friends, I've had it with my brother, goes off and finds their love. It is a loss. It's heartbreaking. So they start building a combined life with somebody. Yeah. So for me, that was what I was going off of last season,
Starting point is 00:47:40 is I was like, oh, the love of my life is actually leaving me. And all the pettiness and all the bitchiness and bad behavior that Morgan's going through. It's a reaction to being like, no, no, no, no, no. Please stay. Don't leave me. This season, I think, snowballed that a little bit more. And I think that there was more of a back and forth around it, too. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:01 And I think it was way more the focus. It's not that the Joanne and Noah of it all is not there because it definitely is. And strong. But the events surrounding this season, if you dislodge one of the sisters, it just doesn't work. It's so rooted in whether or not you and I are in balance. The whole ending scenario, you're so devastating in the show. I can't wait to watch it. Did Juilliard turn out comedians?
Starting point is 00:48:28 Are they more you're going there to be in Shakespeare? fear. Yeah, I think there is like an emphasis on classical theater, which when I say I had a little bit of the fuck you and me. There was something about talking in that way with that project. I was like, I don't feel like I'm a human talking. I've never spoken this way in my life. I mean, my acting teachers and I really got along and my voice and speech teachers hated. I think they really actively disliked me. I guess when you got out, were you aiming to be in only dramas? Or were you aiming to be in comedy? I was aiming to just work. I was like, please just let me work in any capacity. The first couple things, one's written by Noah Baumbach and one's written by David Chase. So if I were you, I'd be like, oh, I get it. I'm going to be on this pedigree train. I don't know. It's funny because also those are the only movies.
Starting point is 00:49:12 I've done like maybe one movie after that. So I do think it was like a weird false start. I was listening to you guys talk to Alex Garsgaard about him looking his first job and being like, and now I've arrived. So those were crazy. That was crazy to be in those two filmmakers jobs. What movie was it? It was Francis Haw.
Starting point is 00:49:30 Oh, yeah, I love that movie. I'm just in, like, one scene, but it was really fun. I liked, he shot a lot. We did one scene all day long, and the acting robot doesn't like that. You don't like that. Nor does Mr. Robot. Mr. Robot. Okay on the first one.
Starting point is 00:49:48 Pick up the pace. Pretty good on the second, third, and then it's all downhill from after third. Really? Yeah. I have this fraudulence alarm that goes off in my head when I've said something, so many times, I'm improvving mostly out of silencing that alarm. I just start feeling very fraudulent and I said it so much and it's flat and I don't believe it anymore.
Starting point is 00:50:09 And I'm like, even if I had one word or I do something, I just like to get in and fucking one, two, three. That definitely happens. It's like when we were taking pictures and you're like, and now I've clocked into a new level of not being here. When you're in a photo line and you're like, I was listening to David Fincher talk about or someone who worked with him about the over and over and over again. thing. Their whole point was it gets past the idea you have of what you're going to do or any of the
Starting point is 00:50:36 preparation that you did or your idea of what it is and it pushes you past that into another level of finding it. But what if your preparation and your idea of what it is is right for the scene? Listen, I think that there's real value in that too. I see both sides of it. I think that there's something interesting about mind-nummingly getting through the amp up and the preconceived notions or the construct that you have and then getting into something where it's like, whoa, didn't think that that was coming out and that was interesting. Yeah, that's fun. I've heard his thing, though, we've interviewed a ton of people that have worked with him.
Starting point is 00:51:11 It's always technical. His shots are so complicated and they're so long and they're throwing focus to 25 different things. It's actually a relief to a lot of the actors. They're like, it's not because I'm bad. It's because he wants this and he wants this and it's not about me. Tell me if this resonates and it might not. Because you weren't getting in the play. plays before you knew your parents got you into the plays. Do you feel like you have something to
Starting point is 00:51:33 prove in life? I mean, I don't even know if I would frame it as something to prove, but I do feel like this whole thing is about being a better version of yourself all the time. Becoming a better person, being kinder, working on yourself, and acting is part of that. Becoming a better actor and evolving is an important part of what this whole trajectory is about. So I don't know if I'd frame it as something to prove. I feel like that sentence has two different meanings. Something to prove where it can be arrogant. And I was just going to say, like, I find you to be the antithesis of that.
Starting point is 00:52:10 Justine does not suck the air out of a room when she walks into it. She's only additive and light. But something to prove if you're going to use that as the definition of does she come aggressively prepared to every single scene and piece of work? Yeah, because something to prove to me is within. It is what you end up putting out, but it's, I have to be the best version of me every time I show up to anything because people didn't take me seriously or because I didn't get all these things. So now I'm here and I'm going to, I mean, I have it, obviously. Yeah, I think it's also just like being like, I don't know. I mean, in terms of the acting of it all, it's also just knowing how rare it is to have an opportunity to work. And all my friends, none of them are famous, you know, none of them are working non stop. And a lot of them aren't in the business either. So, but there's something about knowing, A, that this is a rare opportunity and wanting to capitalize on it as much as possible for myself
Starting point is 00:53:10 and for the sake of job that I'm doing, but also just knowing that hardly anyone gets to do it. So I just want to do, I don't want to let it slip by and I don't want to take it for granted. And yeah, I always want to do my best. I'm also pretty relaxed. Theater, I had a way harder time feeling okay about myself. There was something about face. the audience every night that was just so brutal and terrible and I hated it so much. I felt so much more responsible and there's something about going to sets and being with Kristen and being with the crew and being with the crafty people and transpo and feeling the unit of it all that it takes the like preciousness off of it just being about me and how well I do. So it's a weird
Starting point is 00:53:49 balance. I do feel like I always am trying my best and at the same time I don't think I've got some sort of crazy like yeah. Yeah. I'm not too like hardcore. No, you're like the opposite of hardcore. I try and have fun. I asked Jackie this and I asked Tim this. You're in the exact same situation. Tim was on Veeb, which was really successful. Jackie was on Glow, which was really successful.
Starting point is 00:54:11 You were on Succession, which was hugely successful. How did the reaction of Nobody Wantsis compared to the previous? You were on Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Mr. Mercedes. You were shooting all three of those at the same time somehow? Yeah. That sounds crazy. Yeah. It was totally right for where I was.
Starting point is 00:54:28 I was like single, no kids, 25, energy to burn. So it worked out. But Succession, it was this weird thing where I was friends with everyone. They were my family at that time. I was heavily invested in terms of just being there. But I wasn't there. I wasn't a core member of that show in the same way. I was kind of a fly on the wall a lot.
Starting point is 00:54:48 And it was an amazing experience. I loved it so much. Because of that, I also didn't have the same feeling around the reaction that it had. Right. You didn't feel like you could take a lot of ownership. ship over that? Yeah. I don't know if I have that now. I would walk with Nick Braun. What he was dealing with was like nuts. Or Sarah Snoke. I'd be like, you know, whenever we'd hang out, I was like, this is wild. And especially because we live in New York, New York and L.A. And those are the places
Starting point is 00:55:14 where people were watching Succession. Middle America wasn't watching it as much. It was like a crazy thing to watch them experience, but I didn't necessarily feel it in the same way. And this one, When it came out, I was so postpartum in my own little bubble world that I wasn't truly engaged in the way that I imagine some people were. But I felt it in a different way. It was nuts, right? Yeah. My agents were like, we haven't had a reaction to anything like this since girls. Because my old agent represented Adam Driver when he was on girls.
Starting point is 00:55:44 The level of attention that that got, it felt comparable to that. It was a cultural phenomenon. Yeah, it's weird. I was saying we've been together for 18 years. She's been famous the whole time. She had frozen, but really nothing compared to going in New York within like weeks of the show coming out. And like 75-year-old ladies needing a picture, 61-year-old dads needing a picture, kids needing a picture. And I was like, hon, I'm going to meet you places.
Starting point is 00:56:13 Like you go, you, I'll let's meet at the seats. You're on your own. It was very fun. And it was touch overwhelming. So it was just, it was really fucking huge. Do you guys feel pressure for season two because it was so big? In the beginning, yeah. But as far as what was happening early on in the writer's room, at least when I went in there,
Starting point is 00:56:33 I was like, this is unfolding beautifully. We had the additions of Jenny Connor and Bruce Eric Kaplan who have great resumes. And then also Aaron had said in the writer's room really early on, she was like, I just want to say to you guys, we're going to give the people what they want. We're not going to do the TV show thing where every other episode, they break up. I mean, there's going to be strife and problems, but that's not why people watch the show. And I thought that was really a lovely take. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:57:02 People are watching this show to feel the romance. Yeah. Let it happen. So I've watched two of the first season, or I'm sorry, two of the second season. I've watched the whole first season. I watched two of the second season. I'm most interested in Morgan and Sasha. Hmm.
Starting point is 00:57:17 That to me is the relationship. And I love Jackie, so I don't want anything to have. to Jackie, but at the same time, I'm so intrigued by how opposite you guys are, and yet somehow similar. That's like the funest relationship cooking. I love Tim. I think he's so, he's awesome. Did you have fun when you guys were doing your thing?
Starting point is 00:57:38 Oh, my God. Isn't he awesome? He's incredible. I have a lot of fun doing stuff with him. He's great. First season, we were really like, what the fuck is going on with these two? Like, what's happening here? And, like, we wanted answers, and Aaron's kind of smart, and that she was like, it's vague.
Starting point is 00:57:52 It's unexplainable. Yeah, and it was frustrating in those moments where you're like, okay, but are we going to make out next episode? Like, is that what's happening here? Or is this just two people who are magnetic and they're interested? You know those relationships where you find someone and you're an adult and you have a partner. But you're like, okay, you got something that's like attractive to me. So we were kind of just trying to figure out like, is this going to be infidelity or is this just going to be an interesting energy that's fun and familiar? and people actually do know what that gray is.
Starting point is 00:58:23 Yes. All of us have experienced it. And she didn't have an answer. There were moments where we were like, but it works out. Honestly, when I watched it, I was like, this works. It is smart. Yeah, I think actors are overly interested in being certain about what they want. You know, like, what is your motivation in this scene?
Starting point is 00:58:41 And I'm not understanding. I need to know what I'm after. And it's like, well, also life doesn't really work that way. A lot of time life, so you're like, you have a dream about someone you kind of know. and then the dream you're in love and then you wake up and you're like, huh, that's interesting. Totally.
Starting point is 00:58:54 I think I was just like, is this woman going to fuck a guy who has a child and a wife? Because that is something. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, that's something to consider about you. Totally, you are playing.
Starting point is 00:59:05 And what's going on? And is she okay? If that's going to happen in two episodes, that does say something about her mental state. For sure. And from a robot's perspective, of course. I'm always doing the emotional math
Starting point is 00:59:17 of what the audience is watching. See, that's crazy. I can't even think about that. That's the whole acting does not exist for me. It's just emotional math. This emotion leads to this emotion leads to this emotion. It's not just the emotion. It's the temperature of the emotion.
Starting point is 00:59:29 Is it anger and is it really smaller? Is it anger and is it huge? And they have different consequences. But I understood what you were saying where you were like, no, I would like to know if they're going to hook up. Because from my perspective, I would not stop being open to the ambiguity of the situation, but rather start to lay the track that will get the audience there
Starting point is 00:59:49 because what you don't want to do is have four episodes where it's super casual and episode five, they're having sex in the back of the car and you're like, what is happening? I really get both sides. That's the thing. You see how vague it was or whatever. Not knowing the answer served people being like,
Starting point is 01:00:08 whoa, whoa, what is happening? Yeah. Well, it's alive and scary and that makes for a great TV and drama. And maybe we could have done that if we didn't know. You know what I mean? It's almost like that Meryl Streep thing. there's a story where I can't remember what movie was someone like throws a glass
Starting point is 01:00:22 was it Kramer versus Kramer or something where someone throws a glass and it shatters behind her and she was like why the fuck didn't you tell me that you were going to do that and he was like well I wanted to surprise you and she's like well let me act I think it was Dustin Hottman
Starting point is 01:00:34 yeah also I probably could have done that had I know what the track was too so it worked out but it also could have worked out if we knew the mathing the emotional math you can argue it six ways to Sunday but if you're doing a movie and your character goes to a carnival and you haven't read the end of the script
Starting point is 01:00:53 and she jumps off the Ferris wheel in the last scene, hopefully you are going to want to contribute ever so slightly to the emotional math of what gets her there. So yes, actors always feel like they need to know way more. And yet, I feel like in order to make that equation work, sometimes it's important. It's their job and they should.
Starting point is 01:01:13 But also there's a reality that they could have never set out to do that And they can start watching in the editing room, like, wow, there's some bizarre spark between. Totally. They did that a lot in succession. One scene where Kieran looked back, very early on, Kieran looked back and checked out Jay's ass. And it was caught on camera.
Starting point is 01:01:33 And it was not obviously written, but they were like, Kieran just checked out Jay's ass? Yeah, yeah, yeah. That was hot. Let's do something with that. And then it created that whole storyline between Jerry and Roman. Kudos to the writers who can pick that stuff out and see it and take it.
Starting point is 01:01:48 Because that's the same thing that happened on Veronica Mars. Logan was never supposed to be Veronica's love interest. And then they saw the simmering. They saw chemistry. So much chemistry. I think it's the best way. Getting to know who you're working with what's going on with them and then playing around with that. Stay tuned for more armchair expert if you dare.
Starting point is 01:02:14 Oh, this could be a good test of how prepared you guys are as actors. Okay. So my one big question mark when I watch the show, and it drives me a little bit bonkers, is how much money do you guys make on this podcast? Oh, I thought you're about to say. How much do you personally each make on the show? What are you? What's your per episode? What's your per episode?
Starting point is 01:02:39 Let's be honest. I see. People either make a bazillion dollars in podcasting or they make almost none. There's very little middle ground. That's true. What Joanne, I'll tell you this. Here's what we know. We've never read an ad on our podcast.
Starting point is 01:02:52 Ads are how you make money. We have a producer. We don't know who's paying her. So there are some holes. To be honest, Joanne's income, because there's never been a scene where she's put down a credit card or been worried about buying something, has never been a part of the emotional math equation I'm trying to tell.
Starting point is 01:03:11 It's actually a detail of like, I also don't really need you to know what size her shoes are. It's not relevant. And I know you would say it's relevant because it's the set and how she lives her life. But we're at the vintage store quite a few times. So I think they are on a budget. Well, I'm going to make a more dangerous argument. Have you ever shopped at Scout?
Starting point is 01:03:32 Because we're looking at some $1,000 pieces. Right, right, right. A more dangerous argument. Shocking. And I do not want to offend her. Put two nice shoes back on. Because she's fucking awesome. And she created a cultural female.
Starting point is 01:03:48 Aaron and Sarah grew up with a lot of money. It's not a detail that they would imagine needs explaining. I think that's right. But for me, as someone who's broke, I'm a little bit like, I'm so confused. How's everyone living? Yeah, I get the feeling that they both come from families with money. See, that's exactly it. I'm watching.
Starting point is 01:04:07 I'm like, okay, so I think they're not panicked about money. That's just not what their concern is. No. But then your parents aren't loaded on the show. I think Noah also, he's like a rabbi, but he comes from money. Yeah. I see your point. We didn't grow up with money.
Starting point is 01:04:20 You didn't grow up with money. I know that. And that usually is a very important part of identity when you don't have it. How much does this person make? Right. Right. Or how much can I spend today or what do I have to do today to hustle to get what I want? And I just, that's probably not part of her equation.
Starting point is 01:04:38 This is like the age old, like how were the six friends? living in New York at the nice apartment. It's like, okay, get over that. Like, that's not what this is about. I concede to that, but I just was curious had they decided. I had thought about it, and I think 80% of the people who live in L.A. are surviving off of their parents' money. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:59 Like, I think that it's impossible. Like, I have been on a show consistently for years. Yeah, nine years. And I have a 1,400 square foot house, and I cannot afford to get a three-bedroom house. Like, that's crazy. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And these girls are living in L.A.
Starting point is 01:05:15 They're surviving off a podcast. Most people, I think, have help. I don't know anyone who's bought a house. None of my peers have bought a house and then didn't have some help. Right. It's L.A. Like, it's crazy. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:05:29 Also, the podcast is big enough that they had a meeting with Spotify. So Spotify was interested at least. So it had to be. And that was one of my ideas in the original podcast. I was saying, I'd love to know how big the show is. I don't know why it's driving crazy, maybe just because I'm in a podcast, but could we see other people listening to it? Could we see that?
Starting point is 01:05:50 Oh, it's kind of a broad group of people. That was an original. It was a shot, original opening. And we did it. Some of it is in. Yeah, yeah. It was sort of a- Oh, you should have had a fan come up.
Starting point is 01:06:00 That was what Dax pitched. Because remember in the beginning, the opening sequence of the pilot was not working, and we were like struggling for ideas. And I showed it to Dax, And I was like, what can we do here? And he was like, you have to identify how many people listen to this show. I need to know if they're famous or not famous.
Starting point is 01:06:17 And what kind of people like? Is there a 50-year-old dude at work listening to you guys talk like that? That would be fun. Is there a, you know, like who's listening? Can I ask, do you think the fact that they're at their mom's house on the couch doing the podcast? Do you think there are people who make a ton of money and they actually do it in that casual of a setting? Or do they all have kind of, like this is a full studio? Well, that's an unanswerable question because the reason we were shooting.
Starting point is 01:06:41 at the mom's house practically behind the scenes is because we did not secure Joanne's location yet. But also, yes, we did most of the years of this show upstairs. It looks like shit. But we didn't do it at your mom's house or my mom's house. You're a grown-up. I mean, I guess they are too. During COVID, we did a lot from my couch.
Starting point is 01:07:02 Well, true. So, like, I'm just saying, and we had a big show at that time, you could. Uh-huh. I think. I think you could. If you're being frugal, but I don't know if these girls would prioritize being frugal. Also, I recognize probably no one in America that doesn't have a podcast.
Starting point is 01:07:19 I know, I know. It's so singularly. Oh, you're so confused. Every single person in America has a podcast right now, so you don't have to worry about that. It was fascinating listening to podcasts. People talk about the show after the show came out because I listened to a bunch of podcasts and hearing the inside baseball of. Yeah, what would they say?
Starting point is 01:07:37 Because Aaron and Sarah really do have a successful podcast. Yeah. And they do it from their couches. Exactly. Exactly. I do have a grievance, though. Now is the place to air and it makes sense. I should have been cast as that Spotify executive. This is true. Well, you know, I pitched on the carpet yesterday. You guys should be a podcast in the show. We should have some sort of rivalry. Rivalry. Oh, my God. I was like, if you see Dax, please pitch this. I don't know if they'll ever do it, though, because one of my notes from the very beginning that nobody saw the value. in, and that's fine, was to get people on the podcast. Like, you guys had the sex therapist on that I loved so much. And I was like, that's a person that Morgan and Joanne would interview. And it's a great excuse for really fun, poppy character.
Starting point is 01:08:25 Exactly. And I pitched quite a few of them, and it just didn't feel right. I mean, sometimes it takes me a minute to understand what's in Aaron's head because she'll be not interested in an idea and I'll feel poo-poohed for a second, but then later on I'll realize, I understand why. She didn't. Yeah, right. She may not have had the words to explain it at the moment, but now I understand.
Starting point is 01:08:44 She knows her world really well. She knows her world so well. And it took me a long time to really understand that and go like, I just have to completely trust. And her answer is yes, if it's yes, and it's no, if it's no. And that is the tone of the show and it works. Right. I did like this season that you're dealing with the ramifications of talking too much about
Starting point is 01:09:02 Noah. You're like exposing what his personal bedroom looks like. That's not the only time you see them dealing with the consequences of feeling isolated and chatty in front of a microphone and not realizing how it will avalanche in their real life. Do you guys have rules about talking about your relationship on the podcast? They're unspoken. I think we both trust each other to represent each other. I did come to her for her episode of Mom's Car because one of the questions that gets asked, because we asked these moral dumb founding questions, and one was like, this person cheats, they never find out, blah, blah, blah, is this
Starting point is 01:09:39 morally wrong. Huh. And so Kristen and I are pretty loosey-goosey. It's not a big concern of mine. You know, we're just kind of acknowledging it's not a huge concern of ours. Yeah. Kristen once said, Dax could have cheated on me like 15 times and I'd be like, whatever, we're monkeys.
Starting point is 01:09:56 But if you drove our kids drunk, it would be it. We brought that up in the thing, which is like, we had asked a bunch of friends what would be your preference. Uh-huh. They either cheated on you or they drove your kids drunk. Oh, my God. A lot of people wanted their sane. A lot of people chose drive the kids drunk.
Starting point is 01:10:10 We just were like, that's kind of wild. So I did come to her and I said, look, I like this conversation. I'd like to keep it in. I also don't want it to read like we're swingers because we're not and we don't have an open relationship. And then we both were like, yeah, that's fine. And then we were like, okay, now we got to play out someone's mom listens to it. That's a mom of a kid in our kid's school.
Starting point is 01:10:32 Is a kid going to come to school and say your parents don't care about cheating? And she's going to go, no, they do care about sheen, but it's not, you know. That's so hard because you really shouldn't have to cater to what some random, it's the same thing as like teacher in a classroom catering to the most sensitive person in the room. That sucks, but I get it. So that one I definitely need her to sign off or feel good about. But I saw it and I was like, I feel fine about it. I don't regret anything that I said.
Starting point is 01:10:58 And ultimately he chose to keep it out just because he was like. Well, no, I kept it in and I paired it down a lot. Oh. Because you were like, I don't want you to be on a red carpet and someone to bring this up as a soundbite where it's warranted as a much deeper conversation and someone to ask it flippantly. Yeah, nothing happened from it. It already aired three weeks ago. It wasn't a thing. You've asked her times right for fact check.
Starting point is 01:11:23 Like, do you care about this? No, I asked Delta if we were allowed to keep something in about Groot and she said no. Do you ever feel weird when you talk about dating afterwards when you've gone in a date and you talk about the date and then afterwards? Like you're like maybe someone heard that. I felt a little like, oh, is that sort of unethical? But also, I'm never hopefully, although I probably have done this, talking about the person's faults or whatever. I'm talking about my feelings about it.
Starting point is 01:11:51 I feel bad about my feelings about my life. Totally. I feel fine about it. But I'm very careful to edit them when they're talking about each other or the family. There are things that I've cut out a ton that I'm sure you don't even know. I'm just like, I don't think that needs to be in there. I don't think this feels a little slippery. So I'm always sort of aware of protecting that while maintaining honesty.
Starting point is 01:12:15 I mean, that's the whole point of this show. Yeah. I run against that too. Like, I had an experience lately where I talked about a past relationship and then there was a little bit of a thing around it. And I was like, but that's my experience. I had that experience. And that person may be the most incredible partner.
Starting point is 01:12:31 He probably is. He's probably grown. But my experience was that. Exactly. And it's weird to censor yourself based off of maybe something down, especially when I'm not naming names, not, you know. Everyone's just so addicted to binary thinking that it's hard to say something with any bit of nuance and not have to think about the consequences.
Starting point is 01:12:49 And that's super annoying, but it also exists. And I feel like we have unwritten stuff, but most of it's on the table. There's one or two things I can think of that I wouldn't say. Yeah. The kid stuff's getting interesting as they get older. Yeah. It's getting harder. That I'm having to confront more and more.
Starting point is 01:13:07 Because obviously when they're eight, no one's going to come to school or whatever. So I've backed off a bit, I think, on the kids, sadly, because they're all I want to talk about. Yeah, totally. What I tell myself, when I'm trying to convince myself, it's fine is, well, they heard it. All they'd hear is how much I love them and how much I think about them. But that's not true. That's not my decision to make, per se, even if I feel good about how I'm speaking about them. It's totally hard, though.
Starting point is 01:13:30 I mean, I've only done it for a year, but it really is a lot of what you want to talk about. You're like, it's your whole life. Yeah. Yeah. So we can do every single night. There's no going out. There's no. And it's a huge part of how you identify yourself.
Starting point is 01:13:41 This is part of my identity in a big way now. And I'm so proud of it. And they're changing you radically all the time. And you kind of want to comment on how you're getting changed by these people. There's always a bit of tension. I think if anyone in America met Kristen and I anywhere, we would talk exactly how we talked on that podcast. Yeah, I feel that. Who we are.
Starting point is 01:14:02 and then to have to consider sometimes and also your people write articles about you. There's just attention there, but whatever. We used to care a lot and now we don't care much at all. We like hit our engagement, wanted to hide the pregnancy, you know, we had a whole season where we were very protective and very secretive and it consumed us more than it should have probably.
Starting point is 01:14:24 But very quickly, I feel like we dropped it because we felt the positive reinforcement of when we were honest and authentic. The voices that were listening online were so much more real. Like, I'm so grateful you guys talk about that. I'm so grateful you guys talk about you're in therapy or that you guys argue. And that's way more important to have connective tissue between the people that you're actually trying to entertain. This podcast was a big step forward in that, which is the first episode of the show was us in a fight for two hours.
Starting point is 01:14:53 Yeah, I loved that. A bickering thing. And that was kind of like, okay. It was so good. It's so weird thinking about what I knew. of Kristen before I met Kristen. It's such a weird thing. Yeah, do you have two Christens?
Starting point is 01:15:06 Kristen's pretty consistently Kristen. I will say that, but it's just a strange thing to know someone and then actually know someone. Yeah, Monica was just saying the other day. It's like, I remember the first time I met you was at this party and the guy from parenthood came in. Yeah. Like, so there is a point in history.
Starting point is 01:15:22 Same with her. I was obsessed with her. Yeah. And it's so bizarre. It's weird. It's weird putting it all. What happened is. No, but that is in its own category.
Starting point is 01:15:32 It's not her. It was the idea of her. Yeah. The real thing's better. Yeah. And now I'm obsessed with you. Yeah, my example is always like Robert Downey Jr. I'm fully friends with him.
Starting point is 01:15:44 And then there's also, there's Robert Downey Jr. Which I'm very excited about watching him movies. And he's a whole other thing I've always had in my head. It's crazy. My cousin is with Stephen Tyler and has been with him for 10 plus years now. Oh, really? And that's so bizarre. Because I also don't say it very much.
Starting point is 01:16:01 And Stephen Tyler is Stephen Tyler. So you're like hear Stephen Tyler and then knowing Stephen. I still see him as two separate. A rock star and then this playful. Yeah. He's very playful. He's so funny and wild and weird and yeah, very playful. And yeah, he feels like Peter Pan a little bit.
Starting point is 01:16:19 Truly like there was a moment where we were in Hawaii and he was blowing a conscious shell off the deck. And I was like, this is so Peter Pan. There's a hair all, like, dirted up, like a lost boy. You're like, okay, couldn't be more Peter Pan than this. Doesn't it kind of cure some stuff, though? For me, being like, oh, I'm a fan to then knowing, has made me very uninterested in celebrity. Totally.
Starting point is 01:16:44 In a very good way. I feel weirdly that I've always felt that way. That's good. That's healthy. But I missed out on when people ask, who are you obsessed with as a kid? I never had it. I never was there with a sign being like, woohoo. Or a T-shirt.
Starting point is 01:17:00 The only time that I felt so fan crazy, this is this wildest moment in my life. And I think it's less about him and more about the energy that he had was I did a play with Phil Seymour Hoffman. He was the director of it. And when I met him, it was like a force. I felt impact. I felt like a train had hit me or something. He was such a powerful, full person. So I don't know how much of it was just how much I looked up to him and his celebrity and his talent.
Starting point is 01:17:28 I guess, more than celebrity, the talent that he was and all the stuff that I'd seen him in and fallen in love with him in. I can't tell if it was that or just that's who he is. Yeah. He was just this powerhouse. I think it's probably the latter. But that was the one time where I was like,
Starting point is 01:17:42 do, do, do, g, g, duck, g, g, g, g-g-g-g-g. Yeah. Everyone idolized Phil. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, everyone I know that was friends with him just completely idolized him. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:51 Yeah. He was a force. Still, you're like, no, no, that person couldn't be gone because he was such a huge. huge personality. Someone was just telling me a story that they were in this session with Philip Seymour Hoffman directing my friend and young Tom Hardy. Wow.
Starting point is 01:18:09 And Phil was very much like, knock it off. You're going for a laugh here and you do this. And even Tom Hardy, who I think of is the most raging bull actor among everyone, had a reverence for him and just complied with whatever. And I think that's very telling. Yeah. I mean, that was my experience with him was he was relentless. In fact, I remember him talking about Tom Hardy.
Starting point is 01:18:30 Oh, really? Yes. He talked about the relying on the thing that worked the night before a lot or like your charisma. It was the hardest experience I've ever had completely. And I was utterly in love with him. There was always more. Like, more to do. There's more to do.
Starting point is 01:18:46 Like, talk about an actor with a capital A. That guy was like truly. And it shows. He's just so fucking good. It's crazy. I was watching Paul Thomas Anderson's movie last night. I went to go see an early screening of it. Seeing acting at that level, I was just like, man, I want more, Phil.
Starting point is 01:19:03 You see Leo doing some shit that you're just like, it just gets better and better. And Sean Penn is absolutely out of control. Benicio del Toro, who I'm like, couldn't be more. He's the hottest thing. He's so hot. He's so hot. It's fucking insane. He looks like Brad Pitt, weirdly.
Starting point is 01:19:21 Yes, he's got the hooded eyes. He's got the sex. But he's also so funny. He's so funny. So good. Well, gales, the second season's phenomenal. The sizzling hot chemistry is still alive between... I can't not wait.
Starting point is 01:19:35 It's so hot. Yeah. You haven't even gotten. You've only watched two episodes. Yeah. Is it about to get so hot? Is there a great fucking scene? You know what I'm talking about?
Starting point is 01:19:43 No. The scene on... Secret. Secret scenes. It was a reverse back into a 69. Oh, yeah. Wait, give us one word. A reverse back into a 69?
Starting point is 01:19:55 I'll give a word. One word. Mount Oh, yeah. Oh, I was about that. Okay, that's my last question. You, as previously mentioned, you're just perfect at everything.
Starting point is 01:20:09 You're so fucking good. You are, just shut your mouth. Why aren't you being able to say that you're shutting your mouth? Because I have imposter syndrome and it's... Yeah, don't worry about that. You know what, she's not great up. Answering the phone, texting back.
Starting point is 01:20:21 Yes, she's the worst. Sorry. Okay, fine. Let's throw that in there. You are very bad about that. She's not even worse while having her. number in your phone. Sorry. It's almost not even worth adding to your phone. But isn't it fun when once and a while, like, you get a FaceTime? You get a FaceTime from Kristen, like out of nowhere when
Starting point is 01:20:36 you haven't talked to her in forever. And she'll just be like, hey, just wanted to call you. I can't see my map anymore. I got to go. Bye. And you're like, that happened yesterday. But here's a genuine question. And I think what was the magic of the first one? And I don't think you've gotten to do it a lot. Ron Mars had a lane. She was like a tough customer. And she flirted, but it was very Ron Mars flirting. in, nobody wants this, right out of the gates, the first dinner table scene. You were turning on the fucking land me a boyfriend
Starting point is 01:21:03 that I got to witness 18 years ago. Oh, yeah. You got to go full flirt. It's hot. You really felt like it. And you were so good at it. I was so happy for you. Was it so fun to get to play that flirty?
Starting point is 01:21:18 Yeah, someone who knew they were very attracted. Yes. And could sprinkle it around wherever she liked. Is that who you were when you were dating? Because I've heard you say you're not sexy, you're cute. That was sexy. I totally disagree. I don't feel sexy.
Starting point is 01:21:37 I don't think I throw around sexy at all. But I do throw around cute and maybe lean into coy. And yes, I gave it a lot. I gave it hard at my 20s. I feel like there's so much sexy in there. Really? This is the thing that I'll say about getting to know Kristen and Kristen before. is I feel like there's a lot of shadow and sexiness is in there. Sex is right there in there.
Starting point is 01:22:02 I think you don't lean into it or you don't express it as much. It's right there and you're really open and you're really vulnerable and you're really communicative about everything that's going on with you. But I think there's so much more depth and dimension and there is more shadow in there than I think you let out. And I think sex is there. I feel sex appeal in her all the time. I don't And I think you know it's there. I think you just got reinforced. I love it. Cute was reinforced for you.
Starting point is 01:22:31 Validated. Yeah. So I think that's just where you decided to lean. And cute was why I was getting cast. And cute feels safer. And cute feels way safer. You grew up in a very Christian household. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:22:43 Sex wasn't a thing to walk around with. Being slutty was a cool look for anyone. Correct. Yeah. It's a safer thing to own, too. Yesterday at the Emmys, I was wearing a see-through thing that like was Amazing. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:22:55 I feel good about it, but I, at one point, was going for a bombshell look. And then after I said it, I had a full-on meltdown about being like, I was going for a bombshell look. Ew, like, I was ashamed of owning sexuality a little bit. I am a sexual person and that is sexy. I was weirdly ashamed of myself owning that I could be sexy. Like, there was something about it. Yes.
Starting point is 01:23:18 Or that was something that I wanted or that I could possibly be that. It's a brave thing to be like, I can be. sexy. And I have the same thing as you because I've been coined as cute and sweet and fun and funny and goofy. And it's really hard for me to own my sexuality. It's really tough. But it's definitely there. Well, sexy's confidence, which you do have a lot of. And it seems like you have a lot of confidence too. Yeah, but also there's no way that's the training work. I've got to say there's no way she'd be with Dax if she didn't have. Right. Yes. Some sexual stuff. You brought out a ton of my sexuality. Tygris. For sure. For sure. I was never this sexual. No, but I do feel like that water
Starting point is 01:24:01 seeks its own level. And I do feel like, Dax, you're so confident and open about that being something that you have fully integrated into who you are. I grew up in a different household. Yeah. My mom told me we're not a Beatles family. They're talking about holding your hand. We're a Rolling Stone's family talking about getting someone pregnant. That was my mom's vibe. Totally. Yeah, we're not Goody goodies. When I grew up, there was a lack of safety around explaining it like that. And I think subsequently having gotten to know your family and your mom and seeing how safe and comforting she is, it's like, oh, wait, safe and comforting people can have positive perspectives about sex too and sexuality and sexiness. I've said it a million times, but it's worth repeating
Starting point is 01:24:42 to you. I was very young. I came home from school. Someone called another kid a butt humper on playground. So I'm like in fourth grade. We're at the dinner table. My brother. my little sister and my mom. And I said, mom, someone calls someone a butt humper at school. She goes, okay. And I go, is that something people do? They hump in the butt? And my mom goes, well, there's a lot of nerve endings in the anus.
Starting point is 01:25:02 And some people find it very pleasurable and some do not. So good. Yeah. It's so good. Because it is a fact. And she just said it like a fact. It's admirable. Well, ladies, I just really want to thank you, Justin, because you make Bell so happy.
Starting point is 01:25:17 When she gets to work with you all day long, she comes home so happy. and it's a real gift to everybody. I feel the same. I love her so much. It's been really, really awesome. Fake sisters to real sisters. I love you guys. Love you.
Starting point is 01:25:30 Nobody wants it's season two, October 23rd on Netflix. Yeah. Yeah. Go crazy. Let's fucking. Do even a rewatch before you get there. Do a rewatch. Let's double it.
Starting point is 01:25:42 Let's double last time. Let's do it. Yeah. All right. Love you. Love you. He is an arm care expert, but he makes mistakes all the time. Thank God Monica's here.
Starting point is 01:25:53 She's got to let him have the facts. Grandpa had to come over to get his wallet. Oh, yeah, I saw his car. I'm surprised he didn't drive his... I thought maybe it was. ...three hundred to show you, because he's really hell-bent on showing you and taking you for a ride. That's very sweet. I thought it maybe was that, but I couldn't have.
Starting point is 01:26:13 Easy mistakes, silver Mercedes. Yeah. Two-door coupe. Two doors. That's what that is the carry. over from originally. There's just the current iteration of that car. Oh, got it.
Starting point is 01:26:26 Okay. Yeah. It lives on. It was a cool car. This is the one I was telling you about. It's in the city's episode of Mom's Car. I tell you about going out to eat with Uncle Grandpa and he had that car. I was like, oh, who cares?
Starting point is 01:26:38 I don't care. And then I found out the numbers. Oh, that's the one. And I was like, oh, my God, I got anything. I know. But we did a car day last week and I drove it. And you didn't like it. And it's lovely.
Starting point is 01:26:48 But I did think, yeah, I just don't need it. That's nice. Yeah, it didn't, like, change my life. That's like when I see something online, like a shirt I like, and then I go try it on in store. And it's like, actually, it doesn't fit. The way you just said, I go to try it on in store, sounded like you were English saying in hospital.
Starting point is 01:27:07 Like, I would have said in the store. I would go try it on in the store at the store. That makes sense. But you said in store, like, I was in hospital. Yeah. Yeah. I wish. Oh, thank you, Wabi Wobb.
Starting point is 01:27:18 You wish you were in the hospital? Well. I don't not, actually. But I can't go to the hospital because we have a very important guest today. And I'm so thrilled and excited. I'm going to assume this outfit's for her. Obviously. Yes.
Starting point is 01:27:34 Yes. So, okay, we both got our blood drawn yesterday. 11 vials. 11 vials. All three of us did, actually. How did you do? I was thinking, I think I even said to Rob and Roger, the clinician. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:27:49 Monica might die. This might be too much blood for her to lose. Yeah. I never worry about it. Yeah. But when I was sitting there and he, you know, he was like, are you okay? And I was like, yeah. But then as soon as, you know, it's like that thing when someone asks if you're okay and like.
Starting point is 01:28:04 They plant a seed. Yeah. And then you're like, maybe I'm not okay, actually. What is he noticing? He's a medical professional. Yeah. I'm not. People's dilated.
Starting point is 01:28:11 Yeah. And then he said, no, I just, when people are quiet, I like to check in. Yeah. I was like, oh, yeah, I'm fine. But then I was like, wow. but I have lost weight, and I wonder how much I weigh because technically you're not really supposed to give blood, like a lot of blood, if you're below a certain weight. Okay.
Starting point is 01:28:32 And I don't know how much I weigh. An anemic. Potentially anemic, I guess. So I got a little worried, but I was just fine. It concerned me enough where I was like, should I go up and get an apple juice and have it in the attic. And then I thought, that's crazy. If she wants an apple juice, she'll figure out an apple juice. But it did cross my mind. He told me to have apple juice or orange juice after. He told me to. Yeah. He said, please. And I didn't. Did you? Yeah. I had old meal with blueberries
Starting point is 01:29:05 and I thought that's plenty of carbs. I had English breakfast tea. No, that's not the direction to go. But I felt fine now. It had milk in it. I felt, in fact, I thought good. I probably need to get rid of some blood. I have too much. Yeah. That's what our friend Eric, he has too much. It's a real thing he has. He has too much blood or hemoglobin or something. Too many red blood cells.
Starting point is 01:29:26 So a small percentage of people on testosterone will produce too many red blood cells. Yeah. The solution is, yeah, I think you've got to go donate blood once a year or something. I don't know what a schedule is. Neither. But when he was taking it all, it's like I don't have that side effect. Thank God from testosterone. But I thought, well, it takes some anyways.
Starting point is 01:29:46 Yeah. Yeah. But it was a tremendous amount. of blood. It was a lot of blood. Then we had to do fingerpricks. I had to do two fingers because I ran out of blood in one of my fingers. They should have done the fingers first because I feel like the blood pressure then was lower. Yeah, he did say, so we should wait a minute for the blood to come back to your hand. And I was like, oh, we can use the other hand. I was in a rush. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you have places to be. Yeah. Okay, so as I just said, Uncle Grandpa was over. Tom Hanson, my dad.
Starting point is 01:30:13 Friend of the pot and your dad. Friend of the pot. And my children call him Uncle Grandpa. because he didn't want to be a grand. Well, we already already said it. He wants to be my brother. Of course. He probably hates the fact that he's your grandpa. I mean, not yours. No, no, no.
Starting point is 01:30:27 We didn't go that far. He's not my grandpa. He doesn't want to be your dad because that makes him very old. He wants to be my bro. And rest assured, he is my bro. I mean, we talk like bros. Yeah. Also, I admire him and he's a mentor.
Starting point is 01:30:41 So he's kind of my dad. So my kids were in this situation where do they call him uncle? Tom, because he's my brother, or grandpa. And so the solution was Uncle Grandpa, which he likes a lot. That's good. And they go, oh, is Uncle Grandpa coming? Like, that's really his name. Anyways.
Starting point is 01:30:57 Yeah, that's sweet. So I invited Uncle Grandpa over because Uncle Grandpa's wife, Auntie Grandma. Uh-huh. Wow. There's a lot to keep. Which is less fair to her because she's actually a bit younger than Tom. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:31:09 She's out of town. And it's rare that I can have. Tom's never going to come over on a Sunday and watch the Formula One race. But I knew that Auntie Grandma was out of town. So I was like, hey, you want to come watch the race? Nice. He's like, and this is what a great guy. Uncle Grandpa is, he's like, I would love to, but I'll be at a baseball game at 9 a.m.
Starting point is 01:31:30 Children's baseball game. Not his kids. Yeah, of course not. You're going to Ziegers kids. That's so sweet. He's such a sweet Uncle Grandpa. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:31:38 So he goes to the baseball game. He rolls up. Eric's already over. He's been there for a while, but I'm kind of not paying a ton. of attention to it. And then Eric's finally like, dad's out there really doing something. So we go outside and Tom is tearing apart his truck. I mean, the seats are up and all the doors are open. He's on his hands and knees. And I'm like, tell him what's happening. He's like, I lost my wallet. Oh, no. He's like, I think he's these shorts. He was wearing like kind of jersey material long, cool shorts because
Starting point is 01:32:12 he's also stylish. Yes. And very handsome. Oh, God. Is he handsome? Oh, God. Is he hands? handsome. And so now we all join this thing. And I know my dad, if I'm obsessive, he's obsessive times six. He's one of, well, he has the strongest brain. So if it is set on something, good luck. So I immediately know like F1's out the window. There's no way he's going to be able to sit downstairs and enjoy the race without one like, what are the way. He's like, I bet it's at the bleachers. You know, I bet it's at the gas station. He's like, well, I'll watch the beginning of the race. And I'm like, you're not going to even be watching. But yeah, let's go.
Starting point is 01:32:49 So he watched like, I don't know, 15 minutes of the race. And he's, okay, I'm going to go. And he wanted to go take his old, because he was driving a super cool old 50s truck. He's got such great tastes, you know. Yes. I go to my office and get a normal car because I go to the valley. It's going to make sure it doesn't break.
Starting point is 01:33:02 So he was on a mission. I think he spent his entire day looking for his wallet. No. I felt so bad for him. I texted him that night. Find your wallet. No, I didn't find my wallet. I'm like, oh, poor, poor dad.
Starting point is 01:33:11 So that was Sunday. Did he go back to the ballpark? He went to the ballpark. He went to the gas station. It was not there. Oh, no. Okay, so two days have gone by since then. The gardeners are over today.
Starting point is 01:33:21 They're leaf blowing and mowing the grass. They knock on the door. Is this yours? They hand me Tom's wallet. It fell out when he was upending the truck. Well, here's where the, this is where I became like kind of bonkers. I'm like, what do you? So they hand it to me.
Starting point is 01:33:38 Oh my God, thank you. Text Tom. Oh, my God. I have your wallet. Yeah. And then I'm like, how? how and then I find out it was across the driveway in the fake grass where my trailer is so then it takes tom when you got here did you like go look in my trailer yeah this is a gearhead maybe he peaked in there
Starting point is 01:33:56 to see what's happening he's like no and now I'm like I spend the next two hours like this doesn't make sense mystery was it on the floorboard of the truck when he turned out it slid off over there blah blah and then it hit me Monica like I was Veronica Mars leaf When he pulled in for sure to do the gate coat, he opened his door, wallet fell out, he enters the property, drives in, gates closed, someone else walks by the house, sees a wallet sitting directly in front of our house, and then threw it over the wall. What a good Samaritan. Yeah, so there's a very long-winded, if there's any chance in hell that an arm, Jerry did that,
Starting point is 01:34:36 my deepest gratitude. That's so, you know, we only hear bad stories. And that's a nice story. What do they call that news? That's a good citizen. There's like a news, feel good news or something. Yeah. Yeah, just positive stuff.
Starting point is 01:34:52 Like, that's great. Yeah, that is probably what happened. My guess would have been that when he was like, where is it? And, you know, he was like tossing everything around. It fell out. He didn't see it. And then the leaf blower situation blew it over there. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:08 It is a very heavy wallet. Dad has a lot of credit card. When I held the wall, I don't want this in his back pocket. This feels dangerously heavy. It's like my purse. Yeah, I don't think a leaf lower would have shot it all the way over there. So I was going crazy trying to figure this out. I love a mystery.
Starting point is 01:35:27 Once it was solved, I loved it. Of course. It's strenuous when you're in the middle of it, but it's really exciting to solve a mystery. Yes. All right. Now I'm going to do a really, really heavy push. It's a request to the cherries. Okay.
Starting point is 01:35:41 You've got to watch Monarch. because episode of mom's car it is so funny and your face is so funny well you trick me i trick you but it doesn't end there your face is so expressive the whole time i have an expressive face you have an incredibly your your face betray thee yeah it does and so my post in fact was about this is what no one saw for seven years like you kind of think you're understanding what you're saying You're missing 70% of the data. Yeah, you know what? The truth is, I do have a face for radio.
Starting point is 01:36:19 Like, I have a face for radio. Like, they need to see it to believe. No, you don't, right. You don't have a face for radio, as it turns out. Yeah. Well, that was a fun thing to do. That was a fun. It's a really fun episode.
Starting point is 01:36:34 And I do get, I get tricked. And even though I knew something. was up, but I wanted to believe what I wanted to believe, you know, that's help for you. I went too hard a couple times, but all in all, you did stay into the very last sentence. So I guess it was pretty perfect. It was probable enough. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Even though, yeah, you too.
Starting point is 01:36:56 In retrospect. The worst was me saying sun worshiper when I had said that exact phrase to you in the, in the yard walking to the car. Yeah, but you kind of used my, like, you used my susceptibility to the same. Sim. Uh-huh. Because, of course, in my head, I'm like, this is so, Sim, we just said it. Yes, which you now expect.
Starting point is 01:37:18 He's obviously my person. Yes, yes. Anyway, yes. If you haven't seen that, that's a fun thing to listen to. Also, I have a request to the cherries. Yeah. And I'm going to talk about this a little more, but Beth's Dead, a podcast. Which is a show you made with your friends.
Starting point is 01:37:38 Yes, that we many years ago. we armchair were like let's help do that like let's put this thing together a podcast that is very uh it's like true crimey mixed with some nancy drew mystery elements and it's very fun we've been working on it for two years and it is finally coming out and i'm really proud of it october 30th oh a baby devil's night yeah we considered putting it out on the 31st but it was like people are busy on the 31st you know Yes, yes. Yeah, they're racing around trying to get their costume. Yeah, and your kids, and dressed, and all that stuff.
Starting point is 01:38:15 So it's 10 episodes. It's out all at once. It's on Patreon. Right. There'll be links, and we're going to play a trailer for it here, not today, but when it's... As we approach, Devil's Night. And it's fun. Devil's Night release is pretty cool timing.
Starting point is 01:38:33 Yeah. And I'm not going to spoil anything. It does take a ton of twists and turns, but it ends. up. There's something so poetic about the way it ends in relation to what we do on this show. Uh-huh. And, um, sim, you know. Very sim. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:38:51 Unlike the boyfriend that didn't exist. Yeah, I would argue you so much Charlie Sheen-Dak. What I'll say is it like, you come in for the rubbernecking aspect. It's so well made. Yeah. And by the end of it, you're like just really, really emotionally. Yeah. Invested. Invested in torn up at the end. And it's like this bizarrely beautiful thing.
Starting point is 01:39:15 They really did it all. They gave you all the juiciness. And then they really made it quite meaningful at the end. That's awesome. Yeah. I have a couple things. People have been, and they pertain to you. I've been trying to keep track of them as they come in. Fun fact. This is from Lexi View on Instagram. Fun fact. The guy who wrote Contagion, your favorite movie. yes is also behind the got milk campaign no scott z burns what how can that be he was how happy are you with that i can't your favorite ad campaign ever coupled with your favorite um one of virus movie yes my favorite virus movie wow that's i love that guy yeah scott z Scott Z. What's he up to now?
Starting point is 01:40:09 Something genius, I guarantee. Oh, my God. Okay, now are you ready for this one? Yes. Now, I don't know where this person works, but the way they're saying this, I'm inclined to think they're high up. Okay.
Starting point is 01:40:20 This is from Pumpy Parr 16. We would love to have you and Monica Padman at the U.S. Open. We'll work on getting this message to your team through the proper channels. Tennis ball, heart hand. Oh, my God. The privilege. The privilege is outrageous. I can't even accept it. Also, that episode isn't even out. Maybe it came up on a fact check. Okay. Wow. I'll go. And I can't wait to have a honey deuce. I'll have a couple. Yeah. I have three. Take your top off. I mean. No one's ever done it at the U.S. Open. Wow. How, yeah, because it's a, it's a classy event. It is. It's, well, I was going to say,
Starting point is 01:41:04 I'll make it rowdy. The Kentucky Derby is not very classy, is it? Well, they do wear big hats. Yeah, and they drink mint and juleps. Stay tuned for more armchair expert, if you dare. You know, most of these big events, they have a signature cocktail. Signature cocktails are a whole thing. It's a part of branding.
Starting point is 01:41:36 It is. I mean, you know, weddings will often have a signature cocktail. It'll be like their names. Yeah, yeah. Mm-hmm. Yeah, the John and Jenny or whatever. Right. We should have one here at the show that we offer guests.
Starting point is 01:41:48 Monoscow Padmule. Which brings me to, which is so weird, ding, ding, ding. I would love to find out, I could do it. I'm going to do it. What our guest's cocktail is. I can't wait. Because I think it would be great to have a drink. for her. I will present it to her. She doesn't have to drink it, but I think it would be a neat gesture.
Starting point is 01:42:07 I can't wait. I love her so much. Yeah. I'm quite excited too. I'm sure. Gray goose, limes. Or Rob, do you want to just run up while we finish the fact check? Yeah, what am I getting? Gray goose and limes. And there's a, Rob, there's a liquor store one foot that way. I made the trip in, what was it? You did it fast. 58 seconds on my motorcycle. Cool. Yeah. Bottle of Grey Goose vodka and Limes. Yeah. Okay. Last, can I bore you with one more thing?
Starting point is 01:42:38 Yes. Okay. Okay. Because this is eventful. Okay. I just like to tell these stories. This pattern I'm in of underestimating how much time things take me, I think is funny. Yes, let's hear it. Because I just am so bad at it. I cannot figure out why I'm this bad at it. Yeah, we'll need to, let's, we'll dig deep after we here.
Starting point is 01:42:57 Like, I think I told you, I was like, I looked at my pontoon. I was like, I'll be able to power wash that in 45 minutes. you know, hours and hours later. Yes. So there's a tree on our deck. We've had it for five years. Yeah. Kristen hates it. She wants to be able to put a table there and she wants to be able to put shade.
Starting point is 01:43:12 The tree does not provide any shade. It makes a huge mess of the deck. It's just like, in theory, it's beautiful. Yeah. But functionally, it's terrible. And it's just like eats up most of our deck. Yeah. And she cannot bring herself to get rid of it.
Starting point is 01:43:28 Yeah. Because we bought it and whatever. I understand, yeah. And then it was like, well, could we have it transferred somewhere? Oh, yeah. Which I looked into, and A, it would be dicey. It might not live. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:43:42 And then also we would need this crane to come in with this scooper. The crane can't go on the deck. It can't drive in the pool. Too much. It's never going to happen. We can't do that. Acceptance mode. So she flew out on Sunday at noon.
Starting point is 01:43:59 Yes. And at 2 p.m. Delta goes, can we go roller skating at Moonlight Roller Way? Oh, fun. And I go, yeah, if you got to get Lincoln, Lincoln's got to come. She's got a lot of homework today. If you convince her to put her homework down, then I'll go. They're open at this time. I said, she's such a little good worker bee.
Starting point is 01:44:20 Well, in the morning, I had done the hillbiliest thing we've ever done, which is I hooked two tow ropes to the back of my motorcycle and I towed them through the neighborhood on their roller skates. Oh my God. So we were doing laps on the, I'll show you the video. Yeah. It couldn't be better. And we're running in neighbors and I'm like, don't go to protective services. Yep, exactly.
Starting point is 01:44:43 No, that's so fun. So that had happened in the morning and then Delta wanted more skating. So I said, I tell you what, I'm going to go cut this tree down. It was 2 p.m. We'll leave at 3. We're going to leave at 3. Oh. Monica.
Starting point is 01:44:57 This. I'm telling you, and I think maybe not even then, this is the hardest I remember working physically since I did, was in the cornfields when I was 14. Yeah. I don't think there were so many times where I sat there. I had my full overalls on long sleeve shirt hat glasses. I was sweating so bad. It was it was dripping off the, the lip of the hat, the brim. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:24 The lid. Yeah. Drain drops. The Carhart overall. were soaking wet. Are you using a saw? Yes, chainsaw. I'm using also some.
Starting point is 01:45:35 Because cutting the tree down, I was right. I could have done that in 10 minutes. But I have got to get this enormous tree into three green waste containers. Oh. And I put tarps down. I was like, I'm thinking ahead. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:48 The tarps down will be easy to clean up. I cutting this thing down, I got to cut individual little logs that I can put in the fire. It's a huge tree. Yeah. Yeah, it is a big tree. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:45:57 I finished at seven. Oh, no, no roller skating. It didn't matter. Lincoln, Lincoln wasn't going to go anyways. Okay. So I didn't feel terribly bad about that, but I was just like, oh, my God. I thought it was going to be one hour. Oh, God. And it was five and a half hours of me working as fast and hard as I could to be done with it.
Starting point is 01:46:14 Okay. And it got to this point where it was just like all these different branches. I have to keep cutting them up so they'll fit into this fucking garden waste thing. I did get the entire tree into three bins. Wow. It was something else. Yesterday, I could barely move. I bet.
Starting point is 01:46:31 Yesterday I was like, I am 50. Yeah, that's a lot. Yeah, yeah. Do you think that when something's like on your mind, you have to do something physical like that so that that's kind of all you can think about? Oh, like just focus on that and distract myself? Yeah. Well, certainly.
Starting point is 01:46:52 Yeah. Like if I'm ever depressed a great solution, even better than a lot. a walk is some kind of building project because it requires so much of my focus. Yeah. I can't like, I can't think of other stuff. Yes. And generally when you're operating a chainsaw, you're best to not let your mind wander. Come on that guy we had on whose fingers got chopped off.
Starting point is 01:47:12 Yeah. Yeah. You can lose some fingers. Yeah, I'm not using that. Yeah. I can barely keep these fingers on as is. You do cut them quite a bit. I cut them a lot.
Starting point is 01:47:23 There was a hell of a police dust up here last night. What happened? The helicopters would not quit until like three in the morning. What happened? Stolen car. Carly went outside. She's got some photos and stuff. Stolen car, pit maneuver, car up on the side, surrounded by cop cars, standoff for hours.
Starting point is 01:47:44 The person would not get out of the car. Wow. Guns drawn. Oh, my God. Apparently what they ended up doing is somehow getting into the backseat or the trunk and they put tear gas in there and then the person had to come out. Wow. But it was going on forever. What if it was the same guy who threw the wallet over, you know, because people are, people are multifaceted.
Starting point is 01:48:04 We were full of contradictions. Yeah. But Lincoln was like, you know, she was really nervous about it. And I said, okay, well, love, first of all, because at that point, we don't know. Anytime there's helicopters, generally, they're looking for someone on foot. Yeah. But it's like, oh, and then just completely coincidentally, someone rang our gate buzzer when they definitely wanted to ring the other one. Okay.
Starting point is 01:48:24 So it's like the gate buzzer goes off. Now the helicopters show up, blah, blah, blah. And I was like, Lovebug, you know, this doesn't work either. I'm even embarrassing. I go, Lovebug, the doors are all locked. I have a gun next to me in a safe. Yeah, yeah. Nobody is going to get to you if I'm here.
Starting point is 01:48:44 It's not going to happen. Yeah. Grizzly bear, nothing. Yeah. Everyone's going down if they come for you. Doesn't matter. Yeah, it doesn't matter because I think what, of course, she's worried about herself, right?
Starting point is 01:48:58 But she's also, she's just generally scared. Like, this is a scary thing. So, yeah, she probably believes you that, like, you're going to protect her. But that doesn't solve the overall issue that the world is scary. Right. It's what I'm attempting to interrupt is, like, the catastrophizing. It's like I hear helicopters.
Starting point is 01:49:17 So then my brain catastrophizes and go to these crazy places. So often they'll tell you in CBT. That's another ding-ding. You know, play through every step of what, happens. Okay. So yeah, there's a bad guy. And then he's in our yard. Yes. And now he tries to come in our house. Okay, well, what happens next? We'll hear it for a minute. It'll take him a while to get into the house. The doors are locked. We'll call 911. They're one feet away. They'll know he's right here. Yeah. Should he get in? It's not like I'm going to be standing there in my underwear with a
Starting point is 01:49:44 spatula. I have a gun. Right. Like, let's just go through every step to try to think of what the reality of this fear would be if it all played out. Yeah. I think this is what you're supposed to do, But I did it. Well, kind of. That was fast. Good job. Oh, my God. Wabi Waw.
Starting point is 01:50:00 I'm trying to set a new record. Well, don't break my record. Um, yes. It, I, I know what you mean and I think you can't. I think it's good to do that. But it, again, it's not solving, it's solving the imminent fear, but it's not solving the greater fear, which is like in life, these things happen. In life, there's standoffs and the police.
Starting point is 01:50:26 least like it's just like crazy world yeah it's a crazy world and it's scary and it's I think I was tempted to tell her we have the lowest homicide rape her 100,000 in the country but I was like that definitely won't help no I think it's just like it's okay to be scared yeah it's okay even like you know there was a big like you know car accident outside of my apartment it was like so loud and everyone, everyone, you know, runs out of all the apartments. I'm like running down the street. You know, I'm looking, of course I'm not like, I'm not in danger. They, you know, I'm not a part of this accident.
Starting point is 01:51:05 But it's scary. People get in accidents. Like, life is very tenuous. And when you're reminded of that, I think it's okay to be scared. But of course, I understand, I definitely understand your position to want to, like, take that away. Yes, yes, yes. Yeah, I talked to my parents this weekend also about a bunch of stuff. And yeah, it's hard when you have, like, emotions and they're trying to be like, well, it's fine.
Starting point is 01:51:36 It's like, well, it's not. Yeah. And they're like, well, I know it's not. But, like, it just, you just need, you just need someone to be like, wow, I support you. Right. And it's hard. Okay. So I invented a new CBD, CBT technique.
Starting point is 01:51:51 Okay. Which is I was ruminating on Saturday, okay, on a couple different topics. And I just made this up in my head where I was like, every time any of these topics enter your head, you have to count to 10. Great. Adding a pause. Have you ever tried this? No. So it was like, and I was like, one, two, three, four.
Starting point is 01:52:13 And it gets so annoying because I counted to 10 probably 40 times in a few hours. Right. But you know what? It fucking worked. That's good. Because I don't even think it was like, I think initially I was thinking like, oh, well, knowing I'll have to do that will stop that. That's not it.
Starting point is 01:52:31 It's that I interrupt my launch off point. Yeah. Long enough that I do avoid the pit of rumination. Yeah. That's great. Yeah. It was quite effective. And I was like, oh, this is my new technique.
Starting point is 01:52:47 I like that. Count to 10. Do you ever like count to 10? And then the next time. you have to do, you start at 11, 11 to 20. Then you can see how high you go. Oh, that would have been good. That's kind of a fun game.
Starting point is 01:52:56 Yeah, like the AI who wouldn't count to a million. Oh, my God. She was very... Insolent, I mean, you got to call it. She was insolent. She was not cooperative. No. And she's getting paid.
Starting point is 01:53:10 And she had the ability to do it, and she just wouldn't do it for her friend. But he was mean to her. He was very mean. He was very mean to her. So maybe she's like, you know what? I'm not going to take. this. He was treating her like a slave. I wish she had said, you can't talk to me like that. Right. And he would have said, yes, I can. Because you're not real. That's right.
Starting point is 01:53:30 And you had a pretty good point. Yeah. So that video is so interesting because he's so mean to her. And it made me scared, you know, because it's like, oh my God, you can get so mad at these things. But also, I was like, maybe it's a good outlet for angry people. They can get out their anger at something that's not real. And then maybe they won't get mad at a human. That's a, that's a, that's a, that's a, that's a That's a glass half full. Like maybe enrage addiction camps. I assume they have camps and stuff. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:53:57 They can have classes about converting it to AI. Yeah. I had a lot of good interaction with AI yesterday. He's AI a lot. So Sunday, I saw an Instagram video of someone burning a stump to the ground. Because you know, once you cut a treat on, you have this issue of the stump. Yeah. And I saw that someone had like drilled holes in it, put kerosene in it.
Starting point is 01:54:19 And then it just burnt like this beautiful little. fire and disappeared. And I was like, I think I want to try that technique for my stump. Okay. AI did. AI was using. It was like, I will not tell you how to do that. Oh, good. Because it's saying you might burn that. Wow. Okay. I like that. So then I told Eric, my AI won't tell me how to do the thing. No, I just went on Google and I found out. But he said, let me ask Gronk. And of course, Grong doesn't care. Gron's like, here's what you do. I've never used grunk, but it's funny that that's, that's the premise of Gronk, right? Like, it'll tell you how to do anything? I guess, like, because I think it also, like, I think that's the scary
Starting point is 01:54:57 thing about, like, if you ask it how to kill yourself, like, it'll tell you. There's like no garb rails at all. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's interesting. Um, okay, but did you burn it? No, I decided to ask my landscaper if he knew a stump removal guy and he said, yeah, and I said, you know what, I did enough work. I like, I was a hero in my own mind. I don't need to see it all the way to the end. Because I'm sure that's another, that's something I'm like, yeah, I'll light it on fire. I'll keep an eye on and I'll have a garden hose by it. Yeah. But was this going to take eight hours? I can't sit and watch a stump burn. It's too much. Yeah. As I don't even mention drilling all the holes. Plus it's fire season. He's according to you. It is fire season, but we're not,
Starting point is 01:55:37 we're in a suspicious, and I'm grateful for it. But like, it is so fine. I know. Weather wise. It's very temperate. It's usually impossibly hot right now. Yeah. I know. Um, all right. Shall we do some facts? Yes, I love facts. So we have something fun. We have a clip. Oh. We have a exclusive clip from Nobody Wants This.
Starting point is 01:55:59 Oh. Between Justin and Kristen, which is super fun. So we're going to play it. Okay, great. Noah will make such a good dad. He'd be like one of those guys who puts their kids on their shoulders to watch the fireworks. I can never see over those people. Have you guys even talked about the kid thing yet?
Starting point is 01:56:16 We both want them. He even used the words Our Kids on Valentine's Day Right, but has he actually talked about it with you? Because, like, these would be rabbi's kids. What's that like, you know? No bacon, no Santa, like praying for fun. Well, we haven't gotten that far.
Starting point is 01:56:32 Oh, my God, no Santa? Mm-hmm. I didn't even think about that. I guess the kids and I'll just have to come live with you every December. No, no, I don't like kids. Super cute. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:44 Super cute. Are we, well, what a day? is Kristen playing in the show. Makes me wonder. And they established her age? Not really. Okay. I mean, I think she's mid-30s. Oh, okay. I think. Okay. Great. Although Aaron's 43. Okay. So. But she's telling the story of when she met her real life husband. So okay. I'm still thinking mid-30s. She's playing 29, 30s. Probably mid-30s. Mid-30s. I have done that. I've been and in things and been like, well, I'll tell you something that was really weird. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:57:22 I was in theory originally, and I think they addressed this. Crosby was younger than Julia. Crosby was younger than Julia. In parenthood. Yeah. That makes sense to me. But I was much older than Erica. Huh.
Starting point is 01:57:38 And I think for a while we were trying to play it that way. And then it was just like, this is ridiculous. He clearly is not younger than Julia. Oh, I don't know. No, I would have totally thought that you were. Wow, because I think she's a good eight years younger than me. Really? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:57:55 Wabi, wow, will you find out how old Erica Christensen is? She is 43, 1982. Seven years younger than you. Yeah. Okay. And she looked young, and I didn't look young for my age. So it's really compounded. You looked young in that show.
Starting point is 01:58:12 We would go, hold on a second. Well, I remember we had to work through the logic of several scenes. and then we change the dialogue. You don't look. It's because she's in a business suit. Exactly. The way this show was and the way these characters were written and the way you guys dressed and looked, you do not look. Oh, let's see you.
Starting point is 01:58:32 You look the youngest. I don't know. No, look at Erica. She's like a baby. Because I, by the way, what a weird smile on my face. I'm smiling like this. No. No, you're just smiling small.
Starting point is 01:58:49 It's just a small smile. Look how cute Peter Krause is. Yeah, the whole gang is very cute. Playful face. But all to say, because people who aren't watching, that we have a picture of the parenthood cast up, I think that you, you guys look like you're one year apart. Like you guys are Irish twins and it could go either way. Okay.
Starting point is 01:59:12 Young. I think I look Bonnie's age in that photo. Oh, my God. I think you look even younger because you're not as buff in this photo. I think that's playing a roll. That's tricking us a little bit. You look young here. I think younger in the other picture, but yes, I see what you're saying.
Starting point is 01:59:29 I see what you're saying. What's the other picture? Look at the previous one. Oh. I think I look way younger. Yeah, and those are just in the season. Well, clearly, it's like, look at my hair. What's 10 feet long in one?
Starting point is 01:59:42 And then it's short and the other. How old were you again? I was. High age. 33, no, 33 to 39. Oh, yeah, sometimes age gets tricky on screen. But I think, I want to say it was even at play and bless this mess where it was like I had been written three or four years younger, maybe even five.
Starting point is 02:00:06 And I was like, yeah, that's great. That's great. Trick the audience so I can do this longer. Yeah. That's kind of what I was thinking. I mean, some people look young like Timothy Oliphant. tell me about it i do not now there we go first of all great episode i know if you didn't hear tio it's a great episode and i was watching the youtube version and for sure i could play his
Starting point is 02:00:32 older brother if we dyed his hair his gray hair is the only thing about him right that doesn't look your hair gray and his jet black i could play his dad i do think the muscular body It ages you up a tiny bit. Sure. I still think you look much younger than your age, though. You're 50 years old. 50 fucking years old. It's so also relative.
Starting point is 02:01:00 Because it's, again, I'll sit now with Ola fan. He's 57. I'm like, what the fuck? I'm with Brad Pitt and he's 11 years older than me or 12. I'm like, what the fuck? And then I'm around people I grew up with it. I'm like, no, I do look younger than them. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:01:11 A lot of them. So it's just like who you're comparing yourself to. A bunch of actors or a bunch of. People's real careers. Yeah, I mean, but I think even for an actor, who's another 50-year-old actor? Oh, you know who's 50 who looks unbelievable? I didn't realize. Sarah Paulson.
Starting point is 02:01:29 Oh, she's so cute. She's 50. She's 50 years old. She looks 35 years old. She looks 35 years old. Joaquin Phoenix, Adam Sandler, Bradley Cooper, Angelina Jolie. I guess it's hard with the women. But, yeah, I think you look young in that category.
Starting point is 02:01:49 Okay. Do you think I should have a facelift? No, we've discussed this. I don't think you should. I don't either, but I do think a lot of people have facelifts. They do. Something must have changed in the technology. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:02:01 I think there must be breakthroughs because Kristen's been a high alert. I kind of didn't believe her at first, but then I saw some things. I was like, oh, God, she's right about all these people. There's a lot of them. But they look so different. They don't look like, like I have in my mind what a face. face look like on, on Bert Reynolds, my hero. Right.
Starting point is 02:02:17 Where it was like his, he was tight as a drum. I know. It's definitely more natural now. Yeah, something is improved. But also people are kind of getting them younger. Uh-huh. And I think that has to do with why it's a little confusing. If you're going to have them, that is smart to start getting them younger.
Starting point is 02:02:36 Should I get one? After you just said, I can't have one. Well, you can't. doesn't mean I can't. We're different people. We are. And I'm a woman. A woman.
Starting point is 02:02:51 And there are women my age who have had them. You know what a good question is? Is like, would I get one for a dream role with either Tarantino or Scorsese or what he's like once in a lifetime want to die having done that? Yeah. Probably because I don't give a fuck. I don't go to fuck one way or the other. But if I could do this rad thing and the person was 39 or whatever the hell the reason was.
Starting point is 02:03:19 Right. Maybe. Yeah, but I don't know. God knows I'm not afraid of surgery. Thank you. I don't think. I think if anything, you're going to be playing your age or up these days. I am going to act.
Starting point is 02:03:35 Yeah. Do you want to tell everyone? Yeah. I don't know if I'm like, I don't think I can say what, but I'm going to act. Yeah, you have a job coming up. I have a job coming up. I think I have six episodes of something coming up. So fun. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:03:46 Yeah. I'm really looking forward to it. Yeah, I'm really happy for you. It's in my realm of dreamy experiences. Yeah. I think it's going to be such a great time. I'm very excited to watch it. Oh, thank you.
Starting point is 02:03:57 Yes. I'm really excited. And as soon as I'm allowed to say what it is, I'll say it. Yes. Okay. A couple things. Justine means justice. It does.
Starting point is 02:04:08 It does. That's just a fact. Yeah. Just, fair, righteous. Deriving from the Latin word, justice. I think that's cool. Mm-hmm. I looked up what your name meant.
Starting point is 02:04:18 It means the German stock exchange. No. It is a French. The named Axe is a French place name, meaning leader or from the waters. Well, I'm a lake boy. I know. I know. Well, well, well, that was quite.
Starting point is 02:04:34 Exactly. Delta, for some reason, has an astrology book, and she was reading me the Capricorn description. And she had a lot of beef with it. She did. She did. cautious there's like a lot of cautious I've never heard careful and cautious and she's like dad this is not you
Starting point is 02:04:51 what about when she got to all the other qualities that are exactly you she was kind of stuck on the ones that weren't she's doing the opposite of what most people do well it's telling to be honest because when she read her she thought it was dead spot on no issues I think people are reading about themselves they they do something interesting But when they hear about another person, they're not invested. Well, I think yours is dead on.
Starting point is 02:05:18 I've never heard that, though. I've never heard cautious. I don't think you a screen grab of this book. But I think yours is dead on. I think I think Christens is often pretty accurate. Yeah. Yeah. She read Christians, which is also errands.
Starting point is 02:05:37 Yeah, they're both cancers. And I would never, what's funny is I want to think of those two. people as having a ton of overlap in personality. Right. But when you read the attributes, they really do have all those attributes. Yeah. Really emotional. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 02:05:52 Yeah. Water signs. Lake boys? Lake boys. Okay. Now, mine, the name Monica primarily means advisor or counselor in Latin. Okay. And Rob, Robert, means bright fame.
Starting point is 02:06:11 Oh. From the old German elements, Hroth and Perthost. Oh, Blothar, the berserker? Yes. Fame and bright and shining. You're all those things. You're famous and you're bright and shiny.
Starting point is 02:06:26 That's it. You lived up to your name. Yeah, I didn't look up anybody else, but just that. Oh. Okay. Are people with ADHD justice seekers? Right. According to AI.
Starting point is 02:06:37 Mm-hmm. Yes. Individuals with ADHD are more likely to be justice-sensitive, meaning they perceive injustice more frequently and experience stronger emotional and behavioral reactions to it, though this can also be overwhelming. This trait is attributed to intense emotions, emotional dysregulation, a tendency to perceive information negatively, and lower levels of dopamine and norapinephrine in the ADHD brain. Research indicates that heightened justice sensitivity is a common trait in people with ADHD,
Starting point is 02:07:08 sometimes even a coping strategy to navigate social environments. Okay, now what else do I have here? Oh, she asked what your moon sign was. So I looked it up, your moon sign. If you are ready, it is. Virgo. Virgo. And explain a moon sign to me?
Starting point is 02:07:29 It's your shadow side? No, it's your emotions. Okay. And, I mean, I say this so often, but you may forget, I am a double Virgo. No, I do not forget. So my moon is also in Virgo. My son is in Ver- That's what makes you double.
Starting point is 02:07:47 Yeah, my son and Moon are in Virgo. Do you wish you had mixed it up a little bit? I am who I am. I am. What did Papa say? I am's who I am? Your rising is a Libra. Okay.
Starting point is 02:08:01 Rising is how you present to the world. Oh. So I present as a Leo? Libra. Oh. Those are different. Okay. Libras.
Starting point is 02:08:12 are known for being diplomatic, charming, fair-minded, and sociable, valuing harmony, justice, and beauty in their environment and relationships. They are cooperative, empathetic, and balanced thinkers with strong intellects and artistic inclinations. Here's one of my grievances. Okay. There's so much positive in the book, in this. Great. But people are like half and half.
Starting point is 02:08:35 I need more of the character defects associated with the... Why? That's so capricorn of you to say. Why can't we just... You just can't all be positive or it wouldn't be very objectively honest. It's not saying there aren't bad things. In fact, if you go really deep and you read your charts and you do this, there's lots of bad things. I need a little more of those. Okay.
Starting point is 02:08:54 You know what I'm saying? Does that make sense? Yeah, I know what you're saying. Like, we're so multifaceted and this just seems to highlight all, like, our virtues. I know, but maybe that's fine. Mom. Right? Like, maybe it's not meant to talk about the negative parts.
Starting point is 02:09:10 I'd argue the opposite. I would say you don't need to concentrate on your virtues and gifts and focus on that. You need to be aware of your character defects and work on those. Like your work isn't to get even better at your easy virtues. It's like to really be honest about your character defects, have a plan of attack to overcome them. And if they're not giving you the cheat sheet of what you need to be working on, then how are we going to improve? We're just going to like read all these great aspects of ourselves.
Starting point is 02:09:40 and be like, we're pretty great. Well, I mean, I guess it depends on how obsessed with yourself you are. Like, I think you could read it and be like, oh, these are nice things about me. Obviously, I have all these other horrible things about me. These are some of the good things that I should lean into because they're good. I just think it might help people be honest about their defects. They might even be able to go like, oh, yeah, I have that. That makes sense because I have these other things.
Starting point is 02:10:02 I have that. Okay, well, Capricorn here's some bad stuff. Okay, great. Condescending, aloof, unforgiving. Uh-huh. Pessimistic. Uh-huh. Critical.
Starting point is 02:10:14 Stubborn. Mm-hmm. Sensitive. Mm-hmm. That could go either way. Yeah. Melancholy. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 02:10:22 Yeah. Um. I'm very upbeat. You have, you're not only upbeat. I'm not only upbeat, but I trend upbeat. Oh, you mean, yeah. You're not like an e-or. No.
Starting point is 02:10:34 I'm a good time, Charlie. Let's go do this fun thing. Let's go have a blast. But if it starts going, you don't like it. if it starts tipping based on something that isn't your in your control, you don't like it. That doesn't mean melancholy. No. Do I not like being out of control?
Starting point is 02:10:51 Not at all. But I'm not like a somber person. No. I agree with you there. Okay. So suspicious. Oh, big time. Very suspicious.
Starting point is 02:11:01 These are all bad stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Ambitious, hardworking. That's not a bad thing. I know now I've switched. Change gears. Disciplines.
Starting point is 02:11:10 set lofty goals. Do Virgo's change gears without any indication? Well, we are very balanced. Jump topics. Here's mine. Here, I'll do some bad ones. I'll do some bad ones since you really want to do that. Observant perfectionists, judgmental, overthinking, fussy, critical.
Starting point is 02:11:35 There's just so many good ones. It's just too many good ones do we do. Stubborn. Do you identify with those? Yeah, definitely. I identify with the good and the bad of them. Yeah. I think I'm a lot of these things.
Starting point is 02:11:50 Yeah. Worry about things being done correctly. I'd already say overthinking. I said that. Hardworking. Extremely loyal. Stubborn, I said, I think. Attention to detail.
Starting point is 02:12:04 Some of these are two of the same thing, really, like critical. Yes. attention to detail. Yes. My dad would say that because he, you know, has to be so like, he has to look for problems and his job all the time looking for problems. And so he does look for problems all the time and in life. And it's like chicken or the egg.
Starting point is 02:12:25 Is it the job? No. I don't know. It's reinforced by the job because then he isn't a reason to lollygagging that side of himself, you know, like spend a lot of time there. Yeah. But I think the fact that that was his nature is what drew him to being an engineer. That's what made him good at it, I guess.
Starting point is 02:12:45 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I guess. Yeah. So, like, if you need a job, I think you should go to your sign. Yeah, go to your sign. Look at the, maybe the bad things and see what kind of jobs require those. Although, what's tricky about that is we have completely different signs and different attributes. And the perfect job for us is still both podcast hosts.
Starting point is 02:13:08 Yeah, but we do very different things here. Yeah, yeah. That I think lean into our very specific attributes. For sure. But I'm just saying this is a job that somehow would accommodate both types. Yeah. Yeah. Sure.
Starting point is 02:13:23 Charlie. Man of the water. So I think that's it for Fackies. It was really fun. That's it. All right. Love you. Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondry app, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Starting point is 02:13:51 You can listen to every episode of Armchair Expert early and ad free right now by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app or on Apple Podcasts. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondry.com slash survey.

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